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#.». A C A D E M Y EDIT I
THE FLUXUS READER
AI ACADEMY EDITIONS
First published in Great Britain in 1998 by
A C A D E M Y EDITIONS
a division of
John Wiley & Sons,
Baffins Lane, Chichester,
West Sussex P019 1 U D
Copyright © 1998 Ken Friedman. All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be
reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means,
electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise, except under the
terms of the Copyright. Designs and Patents Act 1988 or under the terms of a licence issued
by the Copyright Licensing Agency, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London, U K , W 1 P 9 H E ,
without the permission in writing of the publisher and the copyright holders.
ISBN 0-471-97858-2
Acknowledgemen ts iv
Index 306
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
A book is always the product of a team. A book on Fluxus must certainly be so. Several
individuals made this book possible. Thanks are due first to George Maciunas. Back in 1966,
he proposed that I prepare a history of Fluxus. Thanks are due also to Nicola Kearton. She
welcomed the book to Academy Press and shepherded it through development and
preparation. Without her, this book would never have been possible. Thanks, finally, to
Mariangela Palazzi-Williams, senior production editor at John Wiley & Sons. She made this
book the physical reality you hold some thirty-odd years after George suggested it.
M u c h Fluxus research has been made possible by four individuals w h o have been
responsible for publishing the three largest series of publications of Fluxus material: objects,
scores, and multiples, books and catalogues. George Maciunas' Fluxus editions launched
Fluxus publishing as an organized phenomenon. Dick Higgins' Something Else Press books
brought Fluxus to the larger world. Gilbert Silverman and Jon Hendricks are responsible for
the catalogues that have become the largest series of Fluxus research documents.
Several collections are central to the research on Fluxus. Three major collections are now
readily accessible. Hanns Sohm's Archiv S o h m is n o w located at Stadtsgalerie Stuttgart and
Jean Brown's collection has become The Jean Brown Archive at the Getty Center for the
History of the Arts and Humanities. The collections and archives of Fluxus West and m y
own papers have been distributed among several museums and universities. The largest body
of material is located at Alternative Traditions in Contemporary Art at University of Iowa,
the Tate Gallery Archives in London and the H o o d M u s e u m of Art at Dartmouth College.
Substantial holdings that once belonged to Fluxus West are n o w part of the M u s e u m of
Modern Art's Franklin Furnace Archive Collection, the M u s e u m of Modern Art's
Performance Art Archives, the Smithsonian Institution's Archives of American Art, the
Ken Friedman Collection at the University of California at San Diego and the Henie Onstad
Art Center in Oslo. All of these holdings are available for research, publication and
exhibition under the normal conditions of research archives and m u s e u m collections. A
number of important private collections are available under restricted access or by special
appointment. Most notable among these are the Gilbert and Lila Silverman Fluxus
Foundation in N e w York and Detroit, Archivio Conz in Verona, and M u D i M a in Milan.
The documentation section was edited by O w e n Smith. I developed the first versions of
the documentation at Fluxus West in 1966 and supported improved versions over the years
since. Project scholars and editors included Nancy McElroy, Kimberley Ruhe, Matthew
Hogan, Judith Hoffberg, Giorgio Zanchetti, and James Lewes. Hoseon Cheon, Dick
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS v
Higgins, and Jean Sellem contributed to key bibliographies. The Fluxus Reader
documentation team at the University of Maine consisted of Mat Charland, Patricia Clark,
Christina Coskran, Christeen Edgecomb-Mudgett, Beth Emery, Jennifer Hunter, Stosh
Levitsky, Carol Livingstone, Particia Mansir, Tim Morin, Trevor Roenick, David
Shoemaker, March Truedsson, Margaret Weigang, Emily Worden.
The Norwegian School of Management has been generous with resources, time and
freedom for research and publishing. The poetic and playful dimensions of Fluxus often
involve intensely practical phenomena. W e wanted to work with industry. Our experiments
in media and industrial production, successes and failures both, led m e to doctoral work in
leadership and human behavior. Our ideas on design, manufacturing and marketing took me
to Finland and then to Norway. This is the place to thank Lisa Gabrielsson and Esa
Kolehmainen who brought Fluxus into a working industrial organization at Arabia in
Helsinki, and this is the place to thank John Bjornbye, Ole Henrik M o e and Per Hovdenakk,
who brought me to Norway, together with the American Scandinavian Foundation, which
funded a year of research.
Professor Johan Olaisen, m y department head, has encouraged m e to deepen m y thinking
on the arts as a supplement to scholarship in management and informatics. Professor Fred
Seines, m y recent dean, encouraged me with solid collegial support that made it a joy to work
with him. Professor Pierre Guillet de Monthoux of the University of Stockholm School of
Management invited m e to join the European Center for Art and Management at a time
when I was ready to stop m y research in the arts. Instead of leaving thefield,he urged me to
consider how Fluxus ideas might apply to management theory. M y work on this book is a
step in that direction. The freedom to explore problematic concepts is at the heart of the
academic enterprise. It is interesting to note that the world of management and industry is
often more open to revolutionary thinking than the world of art and culture. This idea, in
fact, was at the heart of George Maciunas' view of Fluxus. The bridge between art and the
world of social and political production is a central issue in the work of two people who have
been vital to m y thinking on art, Christo and Jeanne-Claude. M y esteem and affection for
them cannot be measured.
Here, I thank also Ditte Mauritzon Friedman. Canon and deacon of Lund Cathedral,
psychotherapist-in-training, and wife, Ditte has enriched m y perspective on Fluxus and on
life. And I thank Oliver Mauritzon, walking companion, philosopher and thefirsttaster of
whatever I happen to be cooking for Ditte.
Another wise man made this book possible in many ways. He was the secret patron of
Fluxus West. The Fluxus West projects in San Diego, San Francisco and around the world
did more than anyone thought possible on limited resources and money. As creative and
resourceful as it was possible to be, however, money often ran out. That was when our patron
stepped in. H e made it possible for m e to follow m y passion for knowledge. He helped me to
organize and preserve the collections that are now housed in museums and archives around
the world. He was profoundly generous, the more profound considering that he was a patron
of the arts on a college professor's salary. I dedicate this book to an outstanding human
being: advisor and patron, friend and father, Abraham M Friedman.
vi ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
THE CONTRIBUTORS
The scholarly content of The Fluxus Reader has been the product of a laboratory of ideas, a
virtual colloquium. It has been m y pleasure here to work with a number of the leading
scholars n o w writing on Fluxus. T h e authors of the history chapters wrote doctoral
dissertations on various aspects of Fluxus. O w e n Smith is associate professor of art history at
the University of Maine. H e wrote on George Maciunas at University of Washington. Simon
Anderson is head of art history, theory and criticism at the School of the Art Institute
Chicago. H e wrote on Fluxshoe and British Fluxus at the Royal College of Art. Hannah
Higgins is assistant professor of art history at University of Illinois at Chicago. She wrote on
the interpretation and reception of early Fluxus at University of Chicago.
The authors of the theory chapters have specialized in different aspects of intermedia. Ina
Blom is doctoral research fellow in art history at the University of Oslo. She has written
extensively on Fluxus and intermedia. Craig Saper is assistant professor of criticism at the
University of the Arts in Philadelphia. H e has written on intermedia, multimedia, artist
publishing and visual poetry. David Doris is a doctoral fellow in art history at Yale
University. The chapter on Fluxus and Zen was adapted from his award-winning master's
thesis at City University of N e w York.
The chapters on critical and historical perspectives have been written by three
internationally renowned scholars in art history, art theory and literary theory. Stephen
Foster is professor of art history at University of Iowa and director of the Fine Arts D a d a
Archive. Estera Milman is associate professor of art history at the University of Iowa and
founding director of Alternative Traditions in Contemporary Art. Nicholas Zurbrugg is
professor of English and head of the department of English, Media and Culture Studies at D e
Montfort University.
The section titled 'Three Fluxus Voices' is the result of two unique collaborations. The
first is an extensive interview between Fluxus artist Larry Miller and Fluxus co-founder
George Maciunas. M a d e just before Maciunas's death in 1978, it sheds important light on
Maciunas' view of Fluxus. The second is the only k n o w n interview with Maciunas' wife,
Billie. This interview was recorded by Susan Jarosi, doctoral candidate in art history at Duke
University. The section ends with Larry Miller's o w n thoughts on what it is to think about
Fluxus. Here, I beg the reader's indulgence. There could have been, perhaps there should
have been any number of other views, other chapters. Time and space limit every book. I
selected these three voices because they are unique and because they form a conceptually
elegant triad. If there is a clear message in the sections on history, theory, critical and
historical perspectives, it is that there no way to encapsulate Fluxus in any neat paradigm. O n
another occasion, and for other reasons, I will present other voices: here, time, a page limit
and circumstance dictate a useful choice that makes available an interview with ideas that
have never before been published.
The section titled 'Two Fluxus Theories' makes available the thoughts of two Fluxus
artists w h o have attempted to theorize Fluxus and place it in a larger intellectual and cultural
framework. The first is by Dick Higgins, Fluxus co-founder and legendary publisher of
Something Else Press. The second is m y own: as editor of this book, I feel obliged to put m y
thoughts on the table here, too.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS vii
The World Wide Web is making a vital difference to many fields of human endeavor. The
arts and scholarship have been particularly well served by this medium.
One of the most important developments for research and writing on Fluxus is a
consortium of five major universities and museums with a key focus on Fluxus and
intermedia. These five are developing a Web-based series of virtual resources for scholarship
and reflection on contemporary art. University of Iowa's Alternative Traditions in
Contemporary Art, the University of California Museum of Art at Berkeley, Hood Museum
of Art at Dartmouth, Walker Art Center in Minneapolis and Franklin Furnace in New York
maintain the site. ATCA at University of Iowa will be hosting a wide variety of scholarly and
pictorial materials that dovetail with the material in this book, and a portion of the site will
be dedicated to expanding and reflecting on the specific chapters presented here.
The URL is: <http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/resources/atca.html>. Please visit the
site.
I welcome queries and idea on any of the subjects covered in this book. If you have questions
or thoughts you would like to pursue, please contact me at:
Ken Friedman
University Distinguished Professor
Dean, Faculty of Design
Swinburne University of Technology
144 High Street
Prahran, VIC 3181
Australia
Telephone + 61 3 9214.6755
email: <kenfriedman@groupwise.swin.edu.au>
A little more than thirty years ago, George Maciunas asked m e to write a history of Fluxus.
It was the autumn of 1966. I was sixteen then and living in N e w York after dropping out of
college for a term. George had enrolled m e in Fluxus that August. Perhaps he saw m e as a
scholar, perhaps simply as someone with enough energy to undertake and complete such a
project.
Not long after, I grew tired of N e w York and I was ready to move back to California. That
was when George appointed m e director of Fluxus West. Originally intended to represent
Fluxus activities in the western United States, Fluxus West became m a n y things. It became a
centre for spreading Fluxus ideas, a forum for Fluxus projects across North America - outside
N e w York - as well as parts of Europe and the Pacific, a travelling exhibition centre, a studio
in a Volkswagen bus, a publishing house and a research programme. These last two aspects of
our work led George to ask m e once again to take on a comprehensive, official history of
Fluxus. I agreed to do it. I didn't know what I was getting into.
This history project was never completed. In part, I lacked the documentation, and
despite gathering documents and material for years, I never did accumulate the material I
should have done to carry out the job. Moreover, I found that it was the ideas in Fluxus that
interested m e most, far more than the specific deeds and doings of a specific group of artists.
While I a m a scholar in addition to being an artist, m y interest in Fluxus does not focus on
documentation or archival work.
The documents and works I did collect have not gone to waste. They found homes in
museums, universities and archives, where they are available to scholars w h o do want to
write the history of Fluxus, as well as to scholars, critics, curators and artists w h o want to
examine Fluxus from other perspectives. The history that I never finished gave rise to several
projects and publications that shed light on Fluxus in m a n y ways. This book is one of them.
The key issue here is explaining a 'how' and 'why' of Fluxus. Emmett Williams once wrote a
short poem on that h o w and why, writing 'Fluxus is what Fluxus does - but no one knows
whodunit.' What is it that Fluxus does? Dick Higgins offered one answer when he wrote,
Fluxus is not a moment in history, or an art movement. Fluxus is a way of doing things, a
tradition, and a way of life and death.' For Dick, as for George, Fluxus is more important as an
idea and a potential for social change than as a specific group of people or collection of objects.
As I see it, Fluxus has been a laboratory, a grand project s u m m e d up by George
INTRODUCTION ix
Maciunas' notion of the 'learning machines'. The Fluxus research programme has been
characterised by twelve ideas: globalism, the unity of art and life, intermedia, experiment-
alism, chance, playfulness, simplicity, implicativeness, exemplativism, specificity, presence in
time and musicality. (These twelve ideas are elaborated in the chapter titled 'Fluxus and
Company'.) These ideas are not a prescription for h o w to be a Fluxus artist. Rather they
form a description of the qualities and issues that characterise the work of Fluxus. Each idea
describes a 'way of doing things'. Taken together, these twelve ideas form a picture of what
Fluxus is and does.
The implications of some ideas have been more interesting - and occasionally more
startling - than they m a y atfirsthave seemed. Fluxus has been a complex system of practices
and relationships. The fact that the art world can sometimes be a forum for philosophical
practice has m a d e it possible for Fluxus to develop and demonstrate ideas that would later be
seen in such frameworks as multimedia, telecommunications, hypertext, industrial design,
urban planning, architecture, publishing, philosophy, and even management theory. That is
what makes Fluxus so lively, so engaging and so difficult to describe.
W e can grasp the phenomenon through the lens of several disciplines. O n e such discipline
is history, and there is a history of Fluxus to be told. While the core issues in Fluxus are ideas,
Fluxus ideas werefirstsummarised and exemplified in the work of a specific group of people.
This group pioneered these ideas at a time when their thoughts and practices were distinct
and different from m a n y of the thoughts and practices in the world around them, distinct
from the art world and different from the world of other disciplines in which Fluxus would
come to play a role. T o understand the h o w and w h y of Fluxus, what it is and does, it is
important to understand 'whodunit', to k n o w what Fluxus was and did. History therefore
offers a useful perspective.
Fluxus, however, is more than a matter of art history. Literature, music, dance,
typography, social structure, architecture, mathematics, politics ... they all play a role.
Fluxus is, indeed, the n a m e of a way of doing things. It is an active philosophy of experience
that only sometimes takes the form of art. It stretches across the arts and even across the
areas between them. Fluxus is a way of viewing society and life, a way of creating social
action and life activity. In this book, historians and critics offer critical and historical
perspectives. Other writers frame the central issues in other ways.
The ideal book would be three times as long as this one is and impossible to publish. I
therefore chose to focus on issues to open a dialogue with the Fluxus idea. Rather than
teaching the reader everything there is to k n o w about Fluxus, this book lays out a m a p , a
cognitive structurefilledwith tools, markers and links to ideas and history both.
Fluxus has n o w become a symbol for m u c h more than itself. That companies in the
knowledge industry and creative enterprise use the n a m e Fluxus suggests that something is
happening, both in terms of real influence and in terms of fame, the occasional shadow of
true influence. Advertising agencies, record stores, performance groups, publishers and even
young artists n o w apply the word Fluxus to what they do. It is difficult to k n o w whether w e
should be pleased, annoyed, or merely puzzled.
Tim Porges once wrote that the value of writing and publishing on Fluxus rests not on
what Fluxus has been but on 'what it m a y still do'. If one thread binds the chapters in this
book, it is the idea of a transformative description that opens a new discourse. A new and
x KEN FRIEDMAN
appropriately subtle understanding of Fluxus leaves open the question of what it m a y still do.
That's good enough for me.
O w e n Smith and I were discussing this book one afternoon. W e reached the conclusion
that it is as m u c h a beginning as a summation. If, as George Brecht said in the 1980s, 'Fluxus
has Fluxed', one can equally well say what someone - Dick? Emmett? - said a few years later:
Fluxus has not yet begun.' There is an on-line discussion group called Fluxlist where the
question of what lies between those two points has been the subject of m u c h recent dialogue.
One of the interesting aspects of the conversation has been the philosophical subtlety
underlying the several positions. Those w h o believe there is a Fluxus of ideas and attitudes
more than of objects feel that there is, indeed, a future Fluxus. This Fluxus intersects with
and moves beyond the Fluxus of artefacts and objects. This vision of Fluxus distinguishes
between a specific Fluxus of specific artists acting in time and space and what Rene Block
termed 'Fluxism', an idea exemplified in the work and action of the historic Fluxus artists.
Beginning or summation, this book offers a broad view of Fluxus. It is a corrective to the
hard-edged and ill-informed debates on Fluxus that diminish what w e set out to do by
locating us in a mythic m o m e n t of time that never really existed. Fluxus was created to
transcend the boundaries of the art world, to shape a discourse of our own. A debate that
ends Fluxus with the death of George Maciunas is a debate that diminishes George's idea of
Fluxus as an ongoing social practice. It also diminishes the rest of us, leaving m a n y of the
original Fluxus artists disenfranchised and alienated from the body of work to which they
gave birth. In the moments that people attempt to victimise us with false boundaries, I a m
drawn to two moments in history.
Thefirstm o m e n t occurred in sixth-century Chinese Zen. It reflects the debates around
Fluxus in an oddly apt way, and not merely because Fluxus is often compared with Zen. It
involved the alleged split between the Northern and Southern schools of Zen. The real facts
of the split seem not to have involved the two masters w h o succeeded the Sixth Patriarch, one
in the North and one in the South, Shen-hsiu and Hui-neng. The long and tangled stories of
schism seem rooted, rather, in the actions of Hui-neng's disciple Shen-hui and those w h o
followed him. It has little to do with the main protagonists w h o respected and admired each
other to the point that the supposedly jealous patriarch Shen-hsiu in fact recommended Hui-
neng to the imperial court where he, himself, was already held in high renown. This is like
much of the argument around Fluxus. It seems that the protagonists of one view or another,
the adherents of one kind of work or another, those w h o need to establish a monetary value
for one body of objects or another, seem to feel the need to do so by discounting, discrediting
or disenfranchising everyone else. That makes no sense in a laboratory, let alone a laboratory
of ideas and social practice.
The other m o m e n t 1 consider took place a few years ago, when Marcel D u c h a m p declared
that the true artist of the future would go underground. T o the degree that Fluxus is a body
of ideas and practices, w e are visible and w e remain so. T o the degree that Fluxus is or m a y
be an art form, it m a y well have gone underground already. If this is true, w h o can possibly
say that Fluxus is or isn't dead? W e don't k n o w 'whodunit', w e don't k n o w w h o does it and
we certainly don't k n o w w h o m a y do it in the future.
K e n Friedman
PARTI
THREE HISTORIES
OWEN SMITH:
DEVELOPING A FLUXABLE FORUM: EARLY
PERFORMANCE AND PUBLISHING
Should a manifesto be launched today? It would be too beautiful, too easy. The heroic
epoch of manifestos - Dada, Surrealists and others, even individuals, is well past... It is
no longer a matter of yelling, it's a matter of mattering! But h o w to matter? Perhaps in
any way, not at all! In a certain way then? Not that either! W h a t then? W h a t is to do, is
to create acts, gestures absurd in appearance, but in reality full of meaning ... The
character of these acts, these gestures, are absolutely different than the intentions of
Dada. The term 'neo-Dada' which is often used in rapport with this new artistic
movement, appears to m e to be very badly chosen, erroneous even. The movement
knows a certain vogue in the U.S. It's there that the composer John Cage lives, the
inventor of the 'prepared piano,' and w h o introduced the aleatoric, the chance to
music H e can be considered as a classical ancestor to this tendency, but only in a
certain meaning. The young Americans George Brecht, Dick Higgins, La Monte
Young, Alison Knowles, George Maciunas ... Ben Patterson, Terry Reilly and Emmett
Williams, of whose productions w e will see this evening, pursue purposes already
completely separate from Cage, though they have, however, a respectful affection.'
After this introduction the concert itself began with a performance of Ben Patterson's
Paper Piece. T w o performers entered the stage from the wings carrying a large 3'xl5' sheet of
paper, which they then held over the heads of the front of the audience. A t the same time,
sounds of crumpling and tearing paper could be heard from behind the on-stage paper
screen, in which a number of small holes began to appear. The piece of paper held over the
audience's heads was then dropped as shreds and balls of paper were thrown over the screen
and out into the audience. A s the small holes grew larger, performers could be seen behind
the screen. T h e initial two performers carried another large sheet out over the audience and
from this a number of printed sheets of letter-sized paper were d u m p e d onto the audience. O n
one side of these sheets was a kind of manifesto:
"PURGE the world of bourgeois sickness, 'intellectual', professional & commercialised
culture, P U R G E the world of dead art, imitation, artificial art, abstract art, illusionistic
4 O W E N SMITH
The performance of Paper Piece ended as the paper screen was gradually torn to shreds,
leaving a paper-strewn stage.
A s the evening progressed, Fluxus performers presented the audience with the latest
experiments in music, in particular something called action music. Emmett Williams
performed his Alphabet Symphony and Counting Song, Joseph Beuys gave his Siberian
Symphony and Wolf Vostell, his Decollage Kleenex. There were works by George Brecht,
Arthur Koepcke and B o b Watts, and a number of group performances of works including
Dick Higgins' Constellation No 4 and Constellation No 7, Daniel Spoerri's Homage a
I'Allemagne and George Maciunas' In Memoriam to Adriano Olivetti.
The third and the fourth pieces of the concert, Higgins' Constellation No 7 and
Constellation No 4, were performed by Maciunas, Vostell, Schmit, Trowbridge, Klintberg,
Koepcke, Spoerri and Paik, and had become a kind of set piece for these festival
performances. Higgins described the performance of Constellation No 4 as follows:
Each performer chooses a sound to be produced on any instrument available to him,
including the voice. The sound is to have a clearly defined percussive attack and a
delay which is no longer than a second Words, crackling and rustling sounds, for
example, are excluded, because they have multiple attacks and decays. The
performers begin at any time when they agree they are ready. Each performer
produces his sound as efficiently as possible, almost simultaneously with the other
performers' sounds. A s soon as the last decay has died away, the piece is over.
Slightly later in the same concert Williams' Counting Song and Spoerri's Homage a
I'Allemagne were simultaneously performed by the composers themselves. T h e masked
Williams performed thefirstversion of his Counting Song, in which the performer counts the
audience aloud from the stage. At the same time Spoerri, seated at the same table that had
been used by Wilhelm, performed his work, which was a verbal transmogrification of
Wilhelm's introductory speech. After these pieces Williams, Maciunas and Schmit performed
the eighth work of the evening, Watts' Two Inches, the score for which reads 'stretch a 2 inch
ribbon across the stage and cut it'. This piece was performed by Schmit and Williams starting
at the left side of the stage, with Schmit holding one end of a two-inch-wide ribbon and
Williams holding the rest of the rolled-up ribbon. Williams then walked to the right side of
the stage, thereby stretching the ribbon across the mouth of the stage. After this action was
complete, Maciunas walked centre stage and cut the ribbon in half. Watts' piece was followed
by a performance of Maciunas' In Memoriam Adriano Olivetti - an aleatoric score based on
the instruction 'Any used tape from an Olivetti adding machine .. .'4 In this, performers are
each assigned a number as well as a specific action that they are to perform. Using the
adding-machine tapes as a score they execute their assigned action each time their number
occurs. T h e Dusseldorf presentation of the Olivetti piece, performed by Klintberg,
Trowbridge, Schmit, Paik, Vostell, Williams, Kopcke and Spoerri, included the following
actions: opening and closing an umbrella, blowing a whistle, sitting and standing, bowing,
saluting and pointing. The evening concluded with a performance of Brecht's Word Event, in
DEVELOPING A FLUXABLE FORUM 5
which the performers turned off all the lights and left, leaving the audience alone in the
darkened auditorium.
The Fluxus performance festival held at the Dusseldorf Art Academy on 2-3 February
1963 was a significant historical marker in the early development of the Fluxus group. The
Dusseldorf performance had been preceded in the autumn and winter of 1962 by Fluxus
festivals in Wiesbaden, Copenhagen and Paris, and was subsequently followed in the spring
and summer of 1963 by festivals in Amsterdam, The Hague and Nice. The Dusseldorf festival
was significant in that it showed a turning-away from the initial conception of Fluxus as a
forum for the performance of 'interesting things' towards a more focused concern with event-
based performances.5 This change of emphasis was not a total rejection of the more diverse
avenues previously explored under the rubric Fluxus, but rather a notable point in the
development of a focused Fluxus attitude and related performance style. These changes are
significant for they would continue directly to shape the philosophical nature and historical
development of the Fluxus group over the next several decades.
The festival at Dusseldorf had been jointly organised by Joseph Beuys w h o was a faculty
member of the Dusseldorf Art Academy, and one of the organisers of the Fluxus Group,
George Maciunas. This association, as so often happened in the history of Fluxus, was not so
much a collaboration of like-minded artistic innovators as a m u c h more mundane affiliation
of friends of friends w h o needed a performance space for their experimental work most
importantly for a performance. While most Fluxus performances and events were the result
of planning by Maciunas and others, they generally came about as a direct manifestation of
an ever-shifting network of associations, contacts and collaborations, many of which were
more the result of chance than of forethought.
Take, for example, the historically and conceptually significant class on composition
taught by John Cage at the N e w School for Social Research. The students and occasional
visitors included m a n y artists w h o would become central to the development of both Fluxus
and happenings - Al Hansen, Allan Kaprow, George Brecht, Dick Higgins, Jackson M a c
L o w among others. This class was a key early gathering in America of like-minded
individuals, and both the ideas shared and the contacts made there would continue to
influence the development of new and experimental art forms for years to come. So, was this
meeting planned? N o , for although Cage had certainly planned the class, there was certainly
no plan by the students themselves. W a s it fate? Possibly. The history of this period would be
different if this class had not happened. W a s it luck? Most probably - but it was a historical
situation that was used to the full through the continued work and association of the
individual involved. In Europe there were similar environments that brought together like-
minded individuals w h o would later become significant in the development of Fluxus. Key
among these were the exhibitions and performances presented at several locations in Cologne
in 1960 and 1961. M a r y Bauermeister's studio was the site of performances of works by John
Cage, Morton Feldman, Sylvano Bussotti and future Fluxus artists George Brecht, L a
Monte Young, N a m June Paik and Ben Patterson. Haro Lauhaus exhibited works by Daniel
Spoerri and Wolf Vostell and presented performance works by Patterson and La Monte
Young. Vostell, Patterson and Paik, all of w h o m lived in Cologne, were in constant contact
and collaborated on performances of their work.
If one were to trace a history of this need-based 'movement' - which w e n o w call Fluxus -
6 O W E N SMITH
it very quickly becomes evident that it follows a pattern similar to that in the nursery rhyme,
'I K n o w an Old Lady W h o Swallowed a Fly':
1 know an old lady w h o swallowed a goat
Just opened her throat and in walked the goat
She swallowed the goat to catch the dog
She swallowed the dog to catch the cat
She swallowed the cat to catch the bird
She swallowed the bird to catch the spider that
Wriggled and wriggled and tickled inside her
She swallowed the spider to catch the fly
But I don't know why she swallowed the fly.
(June 1963) and Nice (Summer 1963). The idea of a grand European tour of Fluxus
performances, or festivals as they were called, had begun to be developed by Maciunas and
others as early as the end of 1961. The primary reason for this tour, however, was not as a
performance venue but was intended as a means to publicise the kinds of work that were to
be published by Fluxus. W h e n these initial plans were made, Fluxus was not conceived of as
a performance approach or even as a group, but rather it was the name for a projected
magazine and publishing venture of new and experimental work. Working with a group of
artists w h o m he had met in Europe, such as Paik, Vostell and Williams, and through
correspondence with artists in N e w York, most notably Dick Higgins, Maciunas developed a
programme for a series of wide-ranging performances of 'Very N e w Music'.
Initially Fluxus was little more than a name and a public face for something that already
existed. This situation arose because the artists and their work that would become central to
defining the Fluxus group existed prior to the Fluxus name. M a n y of the artists in this early
period saw Fluxus as just one of several channels through which their work could be
presented. This circumstance of Fluxus ideas and work existing prior to Fluxus' appearance
has had a continuing effect on the history of Fluxus. During Fluxus' main periods of
development, there was a wide variety of Fluxus-related performances and activities. Even
though Maciunas continually tried to create the impression of a single Fluxus - a Fluxus
collective, even a Fluxus movement - there were m a n y more kinds of Fluxus performances
and events than those traditionally labelled as Fluxus festivals. In addition to the European
Fluxus Festivals and the later performances in America, there were a variety of other
performances organised and attended by core Fluxus artists, both in Europe and in America,
that were certainly Fluxus in spirit if not in name: in Europe, 'NeoDada in der Musik'
(Dusseldorf, 1962), 'A Festival of Misfits' (London, 1962), 'De Kleine Komedie' (Amster-
dam, 1963), 'Maj Udstillingen' (Copenhagen, 1964) and in America, the 'Chambers Street'
series (New York, 1961), the ' Y A M Festival' (New York and N e w Jersey, 1962), and the
'Monday Night Letter' series at Cafe au G o G o (New York, 1964-65).
Over the period of months of 1962 in which the plans for Fluxus festival were developed,
and even during thefirstfestivals in Wiesbaden and Copenhagen, the concept and nature of
Fluxus performance remained rather fluid. Rather than having a specific focus, the name
Fluxus was initially a generic rubric used to present a diverse variety of work. In addition to
the artists more traditionally associated with Fluxus, these plans included work from the
sound and electronic explorations of composers such as Pierre Mecure, Karl Heinz
Stockhausen and Edgar Varese to piano works by Toshi Ichiyanagi, Morton Feldman,
Sylvano Bussotti, Christian Wolf, and others. S o m e of the earliest plans listed over twenty
concerts of piano compositions, compositions for instruments, compositions of concrete
music, neo-Dada and happenings, and electronic music. B y the time of the Wiesbaden
festival this number had been reduced to fourteen concerts, by Copenhagen, to four, and by
the time of the Dusseldorf festival in 1963, to two. Although these changes are certainly in
part related to the practicalities of performing, such as the availability of a performance space
and performers, m u c h of this change in concert number and type reflects a developing Fluxus
sensibility and core of works and performers.
The development of a specific Fluxus performative form began most directly as an
outgrowth of the Fluxus Festival in Wiesbaden. Conceptualised and organised as thefirstof
8 O W E N SMITH
a number of multi-concert venues for N e w Music, it instead became a stimulus for the
shaping of a Fluxus group and sensibility. Although this was generally one of the most
successful of the European festivals - in that it drew good-sized audiences, was covered by
the press, was partially broadcast on television and caused quite a stir - it was not without its
problems. The most significant of these were the personal and aesthetic tensions that arose
between some of the artists and performers. T h e diversity of works that had been included
under the Fluxus umbrella was too great. A number of the composers and performers of new
and electronic music, notably Karl Eric Welin and Michael von Biel, were at odds with the
destructiveness and seeming non-musicality of some of the action music and event-type
works. Although they performed m a n y of the piano compositions in the initial concert
weekend, they left after this and did not participate in any of the other concerts. In his book
Postface/Jefferson's Birthday Dick Higgins described this occurrence:
In line with his ideas of Fluxus being a united front, Maciunas had invited a bunch of
International Stylists to perform: V o n Biel, Rose and a couple of others. But they did
not like some of the pieces Maciunas was doing and quarrelled with him, and they had a
style of living that was too self-indulgent to be concrete with the lively aspects of
Fluxus. So we kicked V o n Biel's crowd out and Rose left.
Although this departure only directly affected the second weekend of concerts - this was the
only other concert in which these individuals were due to perform - it had a m u c h more
general and significant impact. It was the first indication that Fluxus was becoming
something other - something more specific - than it had been initially conceived to be: not
just a general rubric for the presentation of a variety of work, but a form of experimentation
most directly concerned with a post-Cagean interest in concretism and action music.
The necessity of reorganising the second weekend of concerts at Wiesbaden in order to
replace the planned presentations of piano music created a situation in which Fluxus could
develop. A smaller and more like-minded group of artists worked together to create a new
programme of pieces, thereby reinforcing their place as an early core of Fluxus and giving
rise to an emerging group aesthetic. Working in collaboration, Ben Patterson, N a m June
Paik, Emmett Williams, Alison Knowles, Wolf Vostell, Dick Higgins, Bengt af Klintberg and
George Maciunas developed a new series of programmes for both the second and the third
weekend presentations, which would in turn become a nucleus of works performed at the
other European Fluxus festivals. In fact, m a n y of the pieces performed over these two
weekends would become part of a Fluxus repertoire of works around which m a n y Fluxus
performances both in Europe and America have since been organised. These included
Williams' Four Directional Song of Doubt, Maciunas' In Memoriam Adriano Olivetti, Higgins'
Constellation No 2 and Constellation No 4, Patterson's Paper Piece, George Brecht's Drip
Music, Jackson M a c Low's Thanks //and Robert Watts' Two Inches. These works, and these
performances in general, moved away from the previously announced, more traditionally
based distinctions of media and performance type to a style of work that has c o m e to be
inseparably linked to the n a m e Fluxus: action music and event pieces. T o this group of core
works from the Wiesbaden Fluxus Festival other works were added at the festivals in
Copenhagen and Paris; these included Arthur Koepcke's Music While You Work, Williams'
Counting Song, La M o n t e Young's 556 for Henry Flynt, Knowles' Nivea Cream Piece and
Brecht's Word Event and his instrumental solo pieces.
DEVELOPING A FLUXABLE FORUM 9
All of the European Fluxus festivals, and in fact almost all Fluxus performances, were
shaped around two factors:first,the development of a variable core of Fluxus works which
were presented at most of the performances; and second, the particular instances of a given
performance that affected which additional works were to be included. A number of
performers, such as Beuys, Stephan Olzon and Frank Trowbridge, participated in a single or
only a few performances and when they did their works were included in the performance.
The inclusion of some works, such as Philip Corner's Piano Activities, were also limited by
practical necessities, such as the availability of necessary equipment or performers. In other
instances, certain works - such as some of the work by Paik, Williams and Vostell - were so
tied to the individual composer or performer that they could only be performed when these
artists participated in the performance. Thus, Fluxus became a shifting group based around a
core of works that were constantly being added to and changed as artists and performers did
or did not participate with the group.
It was at the Dusseldorf festival, therefore, that the developing nucleus of Fluxus works
were almost all brought together for thefirsttime. The later European festivals although
indebted to this development, were somewhat different in nature and form. The festivals in
Amsterdam and The Hague included m a n y of the same works performed at Dusseldorf but
were in each case confined to a single performance. Notable, too, was the absence of Higgins,
Knowles, Paik and Koepcke. The Nice festival, on the other hand, while including m a n y of
the Fluxus standards such as Patterson's Paper Piece and Williams' Counting Song, was
largely shaped by the force of Ben Vautier's personality and was most notable for its many
street performances. T h e adaptation of standard Fluxus pieces for the street added an
important element to the Fluxus performance lexicon that would be expanded and used
regularly in future Fluxus venues in Europe, America and Japan.
Throughout the mid- and late 1960s numerous Fluxus events, performances and festivals
were presented throughout Western and sometimes even in Eastern Europe. Although
Higgins, Knowles and Maciunas had all returned to the U S by the end of 1963, the European
Fluxus artists continued an active participation in Fluxus and Fluxus-type activities. Five
primary centres emerged in the mid-1960s for continued Fluxus activities in Western Europe:
one in northern Europe, two in central Europe and two in France. The locations of these
centres were directly connected to the continued activities of specific artists w h o took over
Maciunas' organisational role.
In northern Europe, specifically Denmark, Fluxus continued to have an active presence as
a result of the work of Arthur Koepcke and Eric Andersen, w h o collaborated closely
throughout the mid-1960s. They sponsored numerous performances, including the series of
seven concerts entitled 'Maj Udstillingen' featuring work by Anderson, Brecht, Higgins,
Koepcke, Williams, Vostell and others and exhibitions such as those at the Faxe Brewery in
1964. Continued Fluxus activity in Germany was largely the responsibility of T o m a s Schmit,
Wolf Vostell and Joseph Beuys, and included such notable performances as the 1965 '24
Stunden' ('24 Hours') at the Galerie Parnass in Wuppertal, which presented works by Paik,
Beuys, Schmit and Vostell, a m o n g others. These artists also organised m a n y Fluxus-related
performances and exhibitions, such as Paik's Robot Opera, and Vostell's Phanomene, in Berlin
in the mid-1960s, particularly in collaboration with the Galerie Block, run by Rene Block.
In the Netherlands, Fluxus continued its activities under the banner of Gallery Amstell 47
10 O W E N SMITH
and Willem de Ridder. In December 1963 de Ridder organised a Fluxus festival at D e Kleine
Komedie theatre in Amsterdam, at which Schmit, Williams, de Ridder and W i m Schippers
performed numerous Fluxus works; and in 1964 two other festivals of Fluxus works were
organised in Rotterdam and The Hague, at which Andersen, Koepcke and Vautier also
performed. Throughout this same period, de Ridder also held exhibitions of Fluxus work in
his gallery, and, encouraged by Maciunas, he created the European Mail-Order Warehouse,
through which Fluxus and related works could be purchased by mail.
The two centres of Fluxus activities that were to emerge in France in the mid-1960s were,
as in the other centres of European Fluxus activity, established by the on-going activities of
three Fluxus artists: Ben Vautier in Nice and Robert Filliou and George Brecht in
Villefranche sur Mer. Throughout the 1960s Vautier was a tireless organiser, presenter and
performer of Fluxus, Total Art and other forms of experimental work - through his record
shop c u m gallery in Nice, Laboratoire 32, renamed Galerie Ben Doute de Tout, and through
the Theatre Total performance group that he founded in 1963 after the Fluxus festival in
Nice. Vautier also travelled to numerous other cities in Europe to collaborate and perform
with other Fluxus artists (leading Maciunas to call him '100% Fluxus man'); Robert and
Marianne Filliou, along with George Brecht and D o n n a Jo Jones (who had moved from the
U S to Europe), founded and ran a centre for permanent creation at their shop La Cedille qui
Sourit in the small French town of Villefranche sur Mer. There they exhibited and sold the
work of Fluxus and other experimental artists, and envisioned their shop as part of an
international centre for research, creation and the exchange of ideas which Filliou labelled
The Eternal Network'.
Although numerous Fluxus and Fluxus-type festivals and activities, including 'Quelque-
chose' (Nice, 1964), 'Flux Festival' (Rotterdam, 1964) and 'Koncert Fluxu' (Prague, 1966),
continued to be presented in Europe throughout the mid-1960s, the focus of Fluxus activity
shifted back to N e w York in 1963. Several major concerts and series of concerts, such as '12
Fluxus Concerts' at the Fluxhall, the 'Perpetual Fluxus Festival' at the Washington Square
Gallery, and the two 'Fluxorchestra Concerts' at the Carnegie Recital Hall, were held in N e w
York in 1964 and 1965. This shift was in part initiated by a number of the artists w h o had
participated in European Fluxus returning to the U S . Patterson had returned to the U S in
early 1963, and by the end of 1963 Higgins, Knowles and Maciunas had all returned to N e w
York as well. Plans had been drawn up in the spring of 1963 by Maciunas, under the
influence of Henry Flynt and working with Paik and T o m a s Schmit, for a series of
propaganda actions and concerts to introduce Fluxus to American audiences. These plans,
distributed in the Fluxus News-Policy-Letter No. 6, called for a series of actions,
demonstrations and even acts of sabotage against museums, galleries and theatres - which
Flynt called 'serious culture' - as well as a series of concerts and other presentations of
Fluxus work, such as exhibits and street performances.
These plans, and the ideological discussions, even arguments, that they caused, were to
have a fundamental effect on the development of Fluxus over the next several years. A very
strong and negative response to these proposals by Brecht ('I a m interested in neutral actions
. . . ' ) , M a c L o w ('I consider them [the sabotage plans] unprincipled, unethical and immoral'),
and others, forced Maciunas to qualify these plans as a 'synthetic proposal ... to start a
discussion' - not as a course of action. Eventually these plans were abandoned because many
DEVELOPING A FLUXABLE FORUM 11
of the American artists associated with Fluxus were either uninterested in the social and
political implications of their work, or most specifically did not like the kinds of approach
that Maciunas had suggested. W h a t this conflict demarks is the beginning of one of the
periods of Fluxus' growing pains - a period in which personal and ideological differences
began to come to the fore.
Having failed to create a united 'Collective Front', Maciunas decided in the mid-1960s to
decentralise Fluxus by creating a number of global Fluxus centres. Based on K e n Friedman's
idea of forming a Fluxus centre in California - 'Fluxus West' - Maciunas decided to create
four centres related to the cardinal directions: Fluxus North, directed by Per Kirkeby; Fluxus
South, led by Ben Vautier; Fluxus East, headed by Milan Knizak; and Fluxus West, with
Friedman as the director. In reaction to the increasing tensions between some Fluxus artists
and the group's increasing fragmentation in the mid-1960s, this move was in part another
attempt by Maciunas to create an organisational structure for Fluxus. H e planned to create a
Fluxus Board of Directors from the directors of the four centres, which he would head from
the Fluxus Headquarters in N e w York. Although this new quasi-bureaucratic structure never
became fully functional, it did create a framework for Fluxus to continue to grow and
develop under the leadership of artists other than Maciunas.
One of the most active of the Fluxus centres, through the mid- and late-1960s, was Fluxus
West. Prior to the formation of Fluxus West in 1966, California had been the site of several
Fluxus performances and exhibitions: in 1963 Brecht, Watts and Knowles created the
collaborative 'Scissors Brothers Warehouse' event and exhibition, and in 1965 numerous
Fluxus pieces were presented by the N e w Music Workshop in 'The International Steamed
Spring Vegetable Pie Fluxus Festival'. In 1966, and particularly in 1967, Fluxus and related
activities were quite numerous in California. In this period, Jeff Berner also organised several
Fluxus-related activities: a Fluxfest at the Longshoreman Hall in San Francisco and the
'Aktual Art International' exhibition at the San Francisco M u s e u m of Art and the Stanford
Art Gallery, which brought together a large variety of Fluxus and Fluxus-related materials.
Ken Friedman set up Fluxus West centres in San Diego and in San Francisco, and in 1967 he
purchased a Volkswagen bus - a 'Fluxmobile', - in which he travelled up and d o w n the coast
of California and then across the U S giving lectures, performing concerts and producing
flyers under the n a m e Fluxus West.
W h e n the term 'Fluxus' had begun to be formulated in N e w York in 1961, it was as a
publication for a variety of work with little or no specific political or even cultural agenda.
The initial affiliations and association of m a n y of the American Fluxus artists were based on
a mutual interest in each others' work and collaborations on projects and performances.
Several of these individuals - Higgins, Brecht and Al Hansen - had met as students in John
Cage's composition class at the N e w School for Social Research. They and others, such as
M a c L o w , Young, Knowles and Maciunas, had became involved in various projects or
groups, such as the N e w York Audio-Visual Group, the 'Chambers Street Concert Series',
the 'Bread &' performance series and publication project of An Anthology. In all of these
activities what was shared was an excitement for the work they were doing and a growing
realisation of the international scope of new performance and musical experimentation. This
was then a period of expansion of both awareness and ideas which was carried along by an
excitement for the new work being done by them and others. As Fluxus actually began to be
12 O W E N SMITH
developed in Europe, though, it gained both an artistic focus and cultural agenda. Fluxus
had begun to be associated with specific artists and types of action music and events, and
most significantly it had gained a specific anti-institutional stance. M a n y of the artists
involved with Fluxus in Europe, notably Paik, Higgins, Vostell, Schmit and Maciunas, were
not only aware of, but specifically interested in, the political and social implications of their
work. W h e n Maciunas tried to extend this developing identity into America in 1963,
however, he came face to face with conflicting views. Most of the American Fluxus artists,
like Brecht and Watts, although interested in the conceptual and aesthetic implications of
post-Cagean thinking, had, like Cage himself, no real interest in political activism. Thus,
when Maciunas and Higgins returned to America, Fluxus was faced with a dilemma: what
Fluxus had become in Europe could not be sustained in N e w York. For this reason, the
period of Fluxus in N e w York, from the end of 1963 through the mid-1960s, became
predominantly shaped by the playing out of some of the personal and ideological conflicts
within the Fluxus group. T h e changing dynamics of the group began to strain its
cohesiveness and several of the artists began to distance themselves from the group. By the
mid-1960s it was being said that Fluxus was dead or that it was dying. There were
fundamental questions posed about the nature of Fluxus and what it was to become.
stereo for the d o w n payment for the printing costs, and the mechanicals were sent to the printer
to be produced. At this point in the production, however, Maciunas left N e w York to go to
Europe, and Y o u n g and M a c L o w were not able to pay the remaining printing costs. For this
and other reasons, thefinalproduction of An Anthology was delayed until 1963, when it was
finally completed and issued by Y o u n g and M a c Low.
Although it can be argued that An Anthology is not strictly a Fluxus publication, its
development and production was a central event in the formation of Fluxus. It was the first
collaborative publication project between people w h o were to become part of Fluxus: Y o u n g
(editor and co-publisher), M a c L o w (co-publisher) and Maciunas (designer), not to mention
all the artists w h o contributed work, such as Higgins, Flynt, Paik, Williams, Brecht and
others. It modelled a pattern of development that was repeated in m a n y other Fluxus projects
in which Maciunas helped to give form to an artist's idea through the selection of materials
and packaging design. In this way Fluxus produced a true collaboration in which two or
more artists came together to create a greater whole through the combination of their efforts.
The other, less positive, side of the pattern of Fluxus production seen in the creation of An
Anthology was one marked by changes in plans, delays in production and funding problems.
One of the most important aspects of An Anthology for Fluxus, however, was that it became
the impetus for the planning and development of other collective publications. M a n y more
scores had been collected than were used in the book, and when Maciunas left for Europe at
the end of 1961, he carried with him a rich collection of works and the idea of producing a
series of collective Fluxus publications.
Throughout 1962, and in tandem with the plans for Fluxus festivals, Maciunas developed
plans for a series of publications which he called 'Fluxus Yearbooks'. In January and
February of 1962 Maciunas circulated a list of 'tentative plan[s] for contents of thefirst7
issues'. These issues, primarily determined by geographical divisions, included the US
Yearbook, Western European Yearbooks I and //, the Japanese Yearbook and the Eastern
European Yearbook. In addition to these, there were also plans for two historical issues,
Homage to the Past and Homage to DaDa. The diverse contents for these issues was based on
three categories of work: the additional materials for An Anthology; promised contributions
from artists; and materials suggested by the area editors (such as Higgins and M a c L o w for
the U S and Paik and Wilhelm for Europe) for each of the issues. In the initial plans most of
the contents were scores and essays intended to be traditionally printed and bound, but also
listed were a number of additional elements - fold-outs, inserts, records and even some objects
such as 'a glove' by Knowles and 'molded plastic relief composition' by M a r y Bauermeister.
By the spring of 1962 - the time of the publication of News-Policy-Letter No. 1 -
Maciunas had changed his ideas considerably. In the News-Policy-Letter, he referred to the
publication as the ' F L U X U S Y E A R B O O K - B O X ' and put greater emphasis on non-
traditional 'printed' materials. There was to be a change in form, too, from a bound
publication to a boxed collection:
It was decided to utilise instead of covers a flat box to contain the contents so as to
permit inclusion of many loose items: records,films,'poor-man'sfilms- flip books,'
'original art,' metal, plastic, wood objects, scraps of paper, clippings, junk, rags. Any
composition or work that cannot be reproduced in standard sheet form or cannot be
reproduced at all.
14 O W E N SMITH
This list of possible inclusions marks a beginning shift in the concept of Fluxus from a
magazine, and from a more traditional concept of a publication as a printed and bound
paper product, to Fluxus as a publisher/producer of a variety of materials, such as those
found in Fluxus I.
The nature of the contents of Fluxus I is a direct expression both of the changing nature of
Fluxus and its original intent to publish works, particularly scores of an international group
of artists. Fluxus I is a summation of the aims of Fluxus and the sometimes conflicting
realities that were faced in trying to edit and produce it. T h e developing and shifting
emphasis of Fluxus as a publishing entity is mapped out in both the variety of works and in
the form of their publication. Thefinalform of Fluxus I - a series of brown mailing envelopes
containing works and bolted together with interspaced printed pages - was more than a
design choice by Maciunas, it was a necessity if any Fluxus anthology was ever to be
produced. Although this form of a bolted book is not without historical precedent (it is quite
similar to Fortunato Depero's book Depero Futurista of 1927), the key is not the binding
mechanism itself, but what such a process, coupled with the use of envelopes, allowed. This
format permitted both the inclusion of a variety of forms and formats of materials as well as
a book that could be altered as necessity required. Contrary to most publications, which are
edited in totality, then laid out andfinallyprinted and bound at one time, the majority of
materials included in Fluxus I were printed or produced at various times between 1963 and
1965, and continued to be altered throughout the life of the publication. These materials were
also drawn from a variety of sources. M a n y of the works and images included in Fluxus I
were not initially developed or produced for this specific publication, but in the context of
other projects: Brecht's 'direction' (image of a pointing hand) was initially printed in 1963 for
a book; the photograph of hair printed on transparent paper was taken by Maciunas as a
potential image for the backs of the cards in Brecht's Deck; the photograph of M a c L o w was
originally taken in 1962 for use in publicising a performance; Kosugi's Theatre Music (a
footprint on paper); and Knowles' print of a tooth x-ray were m a d e as parts of performances
in N e w York in 1964. M a n y other works, including examples by Williams, Patterson and
Young, were originally produced not to be included in Fluxus I but as part of 'collected
works' publications that never materialised.
Thus, Fluxus lis not just a metaphorical summation of Fluxus ventures between 1962 and
1965 but an actual compilation of diverse materials that had previously been produced by the
individual artists and the activities of the Fluxus group. Fluxus I is a clear example of an
aspect of Maciunas' productivist/puritan aesthetic: waste not want not. T h e eventual
production of Fluxus I can be seen as the physical manifestation of years of planning and
editing for collective Fluxus publications, but it can also be seen as Maciunas' way of making
use of materials that had been collected and produced and which Maciunas did not want to
waste.
The vicissitudes of attempting to edit and produce a Fluxus anthology were almost too
great. Initially thefirstof the planned Fluxus Yearbooks was to be issued in February and
M a y of 1962. These dates were pushed back due not only to a lack of time and money, but,
more significantly, to the shortage and limited variety of the works so far collected. M a n y of
the works listed in the prospectus were not in Maciunas' possession when he listed them as
the contents, and so he had to delay the publication until after he had received them. They
DEVELOPING A FLUXABLE FORUM 15
were rescheduled to be issued in August and September, just prior to thefirstFluxus Festival
in Wiesbaden. A t the same time as the delay was announced, a new call for material was
issued in News-Policy-Letter No. 1, as well as a new plan for two types of anthology
publications: the standard edition of printed and bound materials, and a new format - the
luxus-fluxus' - which was to include materials from the standard edition grouped with
additional materials of a more limited nature, such asfilmsand flip-books and original works
produced by the artists themselves.
By the time August arrived, thefirstYearboxes were still not ready to print or issue. M a n y
works had still not been received or assembled, and more importantly the time that the artists
had to spend was directed at planning for the upcoming festivals. A t the end of October
Maciunas wrote to L a Monte Y o u n g that, 'Fluxus I is definitely coming out, in fact the
whole thing is at the printers ... I figure the issue should go out in mid November ...'"At
about the same time as this letter, Maciunas issued News-Policy-Letter No. 4, which included
plans for future festivals, Fluxus Yearbox II, and, most importantly, plans for 'special
editions'. This new category of Fluxus publications was to include works and collections of
works by individual artists, such as Brecht, Young, M a c L o w , Henry Flynt, Allan Kaprow,
and others. Although m a n y of these collections never materialised, the most notable
exception is Brecht's collected works, which became Water Yam; this is an important first
indication of the expansion of Fluxus publishing activities towards a collective that would
produce individual artist's works as well as anthology publications. Fluxus /did not come out
in November, as Maciunas had said, but was delayed again; for although the printing work
was completed, Maciunas had no money to pay the printer for the work.
As Maciunas was continuing his attempts to edit and produce the first of the planned
Fluxus collective publications, one of thefirstcollective Fluxus (in spirit and content, if not
in name) publications was published by Wolf Vostell. This magazine, entitled De-coll/age,
was certainly, as Maciunas later claimed, a clear manifestation of Vostell's o w n ideas. This,
however, did not m a k e De-coll/age a non-Fluxus work as Maciunas also claimed. Although it
was not one of the announced Fluxus publications, it was certainly a parallel attempt to those
being initiated under the n a m e Fluxus to publish the work then being done. Thefirstissue of
De-coll/age, published at the end of 1962, was clearly modelled on the ideas and plans that
were being developed for Fluxus. It included scores, essays and other examples of the types of
work presented in performance by the Fluxus group. M a n y of the artists w h o had become
associated with Fluxus, such as Young, Patterson, Paik, Koepcke, Vostell, and even
Maciunas, were included; and atfirstMaciunas felt that this publication was part of a
general Fluxus initiative and invited Vostell to combine his efforts with his o w n in the
development of more Fluxus-type publications. Vostell declined this invitation, saying that
he could only edit one such publication - his o w n - and that it would not be as
comprehensive as the planned collective Fluxus editions.12 With the publication of issues 2
and 3 of De-coll/age, Maciunas increasingly saw this journal as an attempt to undermine his
o w n Fluxus publication initiatives. This situation was brought to a head with the publication
of works by Corner and Flynt in De-coll/age that Maciunas was intending to print in planned
Fluxus publications. Maciunas accused Vostell of 'knowingly sabotaging] Fluxus'.13
The real and perceived effect of Vostell's publication of De-coll/age would eventually lead
Maciunas to an attempt to form a retrenchment of Fluxus, to, as he put it, 'strive for a
16 O W E N SMITH
common front & CENTRALIZATION'. As a partial response to this and other situations
that Maciunas felt were draining on Fluxus' 'art and anti-art activities', he proposed in
Fluxus News-Policy-Letter No. 5 (I January 1963) that 'authors are to assign exclusive
publication rights to Fluxus' and that they 'will not submit any works to any other
publication without the consent of Fluxus'. The artists associated with Fluxus reacted swiftly
and negatively by forcing Maciunas to drop, or at least downplay, his call for exclusive
publication rights, although he would continue to demand Fluxus copyright and/or credit for
performances that presented Fluxus work.
The affair demonstrated the existence of Maciunas' more dictatorial side. H e believed that
true collectivity could only be created through strong leadership and even through the use of
purges. H e wrote:
... such [a] front must constantly be purged of saboteurs & 'deviationists' just like the
communist party. Communists would have long split into 1000 parts if they did not
carry out the strict purges. It was the purge or F L U X that kept them united &
monolithic.14
Vostell was to become thefirstof numerous victims of such a belief. This defensive, even
antagonistic, stance was thefirstof a number of times through the mid-1960s that Maciunas
was to react negatively to the plans and projects of artists w h o m , he felt, were working in
opposition to his idea of a collective front for Fluxus. W h a t was in reality happening and
continued to happen throughout this period was a fundamental conflict between the aims of
Fluxus and its realisation. That is, Fluxus was often unable to produce, either at all or in a
timely manner, the works that it had undertaken to publish, and as a result m a n y artists also
sought other or additional means of producing their work.
Through the winter of 1962 and 1963 the emphasis of Fluxus publishing activities was
increasingly shifting to the development of works and publications by individual artists.
Plans were m a d e for and work initiated on Brecht's 'Complete Works' (Water Yam) and
Deck, Robert Watts' 'Dollar Bill', Young's Compositions 1961, Daniel Spoerri's
L'OPTIQUE MODERN, Paik's 'music periodical' Monthly Review of the University of
Avant-garde Hinduism. The materials for Fluxus I, meanwhile, still sat at the printer.
Maciunas did produce two other collective publications in this period: Fluxus Preview
Review, a long scroll-format publication which included a limited number of scores and
photos of performances, information on future performances and a listing of planned
Fluxus publications and Ekstra Blade!, a reproduction, in collage format, of performance
reviews, which was intended for performance publicity. H e also began work on a second
Fluxus Yearbox, the French Fluxus Yearbox, which although never produced did progress to
the stage of typographic design and lay-out (parts of it are in the Archive Sohm); but by the
end of spring 1963, there was still no Fluxus I. Finally, however, sometime in the late spring
or summer of 1963, Maciunas was able to pay the remaining debt to the printer for the
materials for Fluxus I. But by the time Maciunas returned to the U S in the late summer or
early autumn once again he had no money to do anything with the materials he had had
printed, and even if he had been able to do anything he was so unhappy with the quality of
the printing that he threatened to throw it all away. In the end, he kept the materials but did
not do anything with them for almost another year. Instead, the emphasis of Fluxus shifted
to the development and production of works by individual artists, the development of a
DEVELOPING A FLUXABLE F O R U M 17
Fluxus newspaper, ccV TRE, and the attempt to develop a Fluxus distribution network, or
what came to be called the Fluxus Mailorder Warehouse.
During the autumn of 1963 and the winter of 1964 the continued development of Fluxus I
was put on hold while plans were made for propagandising Fluxus in the US. Although a
number of plans included actions and/or performances, such as street events, one of the most
important realised means of advertising Fluxus was the creation of a Fluxus newspaper, ccV
TRE. Rather than being a completely new venture this newspaper was, as with many Fluxus
works, initially developed outside of Fluxus per se and then integrated into the Fluxus fold.
Thefirstissue of V TRE was published as a broadside by George Brecht in conjunction with
the Y a m Festival, which he and Bob Watts were organising in M a y 1963. In fact, when the
first Fluxus issue of the newspaper was published in January 1964 the designator 'cc' was
added to the name as a way of indicating the publication's connection to Brecht (a
designation that was kept only for thefirstfour issues). Although thefirsttwo issues of ccV
TRE, published in January and February of 1964, are predominantly made up of photos,
both antique and contemporary, newspaper headlines and parts of articles, and scientific
illustrations and diagrams, all taken from other sources, it was the references to Fluxus that
were the key to this project and would come to dominate the content of the newspaper by the
third and fourth issues.
The publication oiccV TRE was another example of the opportunism of Fluxus. It offered
three key elements. First, the newspapers were cheap to produce, and this was important
because Fluxus had little or no money to pay for more elaborate publishing projects such as
the collective Yearboxes/books. Moreover, very few, if any, of the Fluxus publications ever
broke even or made any profit. This being the case most of the publication costs had to be
covered by other means and were largely paid for by Maciunas himself out of his own pocket.
Second, the newspapers were a sign that Fluxus was 'alive and kicking'. By the beginning of
1964 most of the planned Fluxus publications had still not been realised. Increasingly a
number of the artists associated with Fluxus were beginning to question whether or not
Fluxus would ever even begin to fulfil its aims to distribute a variety of 'interesting things'.
The ccV TRE newspaper was a way of responding to these concerns, for in addition to the
visual cacophony of appropriated images and texts, they included essays by artists such as
Paik and Brecht, photos of works by a variety of artists from Christo and Jean Tinguely to
Brecht, Knowles, Watts and Lette Eisenhauer at their Blink show, and a wide variety of event
and performance scores. It seems that it was the intention of at least Maciunas to shift away
from the more costly and problematic Yearboxes to the newspaper as the principal means of
disseminating the good work being done. In thefirstissue of ccV TRE, there is a list of
available Fluxus editions (1963) and upcoming editions (1964). It is of importance to note that
nowhere in these lists is there any specific mention of the collective Fluxus publications.
Instead, after the lists there is a small note that states that most of the '... materials originally
intended for Fluxus yearboxes will be included in the F L U X U S ccV TRE newspaper or in
individual boxes'.15 The third, and possibly most important, aspect of the development of the
Fluxus newspaper was that it was a way of both advertising Fluxus works and performances
and developing an alternative market for Fluxus works outside the normal cultural frames.
Part of both the challenge of, and to Fluxus, was a questioning of the modes of cultural
production and distribution. The aim of Fluxus throughout the mid- and later 1960s was not
18 O W E N SMITH
only to publish the interesting things being done but to create n e w systems for their
distribution. Most Fluxus works were not only relatively inexpensive, but were initially
distributed through alternative distribution mechanisms. In the mid-1960s a number of
different Fluxshops were set up in the U S , France and the Netherlands. In addition to these
shops, which had only limited success, several Flux Mailorder Warehouses in the U S and
Europe were created that were directly aimed at establishing a n e w means for distributing
works and publications without those works themselves seeming to become profound,
exclusive or valuable as a commodity. In this context, then, it was only through such
publications as ccV TRE, that Fluxus works could gain an audience wider than friends of
friends.
In 1978 N a m June Paik elaborated on the significance of Fluxus as a distribution
mechanism that, he felt, went beyond Marxist parameters:
Marx gave m u c h thought about the dialectics of the production and the production
medium. H e had thought rather simply that if workers (producers) O W N E D the
production's medium, everything would befine.H e did not give creative room to the
D I S T R I B U T I O N system. The problem of the art world in the '60s and '70s is that
although the artist owns the production's medium, such as paint or brush, even
sometimes a printing press, they are excluded from the highly centralised D I S T R I B U -
T I O N system of the art world.
George Maciunas' Genius [sic] is the early detection of this post-Marxistic situation and
he tried to seize not only the production's medium but also the D I S T R I B U T I O N
S Y S T E M of the art world.16
Throughout the 1960s Maciunas continually tried to demonstrate that Fluxus was neither
serious culture nor anti-serious culture, but something else entirely. This separation was
intended to reinforce the concept that Fluxus was not part of the existing cultural system, in
either its modes of production or distribution. T h e nature of Fluxus work w a s part of a
process of transformation and education that was inherent in their activities. In the activities
in the 1960s, and, as w e shall see, most particularly in the 1970s, Fluxus works and
performances were intended to transgress boundaries, decentre their o w n activities, and, for
some, gradually to lead to the elimination of the category offineart altogether.
W h e n Fluxus I was finally issued in 1964, it was as part of a period of tremendous Fluxus
publishing activity. Even though it had taken Fluxus and Maciunas more than two years to
produce this one work, the next two years, between 1964 and 1966, saw more than half of the
total number of Fluxus works developed and produced. N o t only was thefirstcollective
publication, Fluxus I, published in this period, but the only other completed collective Fluxus
publications, Fluxkit (1964) and Fluxus Year Box 2 (1966), were published in this time as
well. O n e of the most notable aspects of Fluxus production in these years, evident in a simple
comparison between Fluxus I and Fluxus Year Box 2, was a shift from publications, in the
sense of printed information or images on paper, to objects. T h e projected, but never
completed, Fluxus 3, was, however, supposed to shift yet again, back to exclusively two-
dimensional printed works to be presented rolled up in a tube. Whereas Fluxus I consists
predominantly of printed images, scores and text-based pieces, Fluxus Year Box 2 contains a
diversity of materials, most of which - such as the Fluxfilms and viewer and the individual
artists' boxes by Brecht, K e n Friedman and others - are not traditional printed materials.
DEVELOPING A FLUXABLE FORUM 19
The Fluxus works produced in the mid-1960s, even the most object-based examples - such as
Watts' Rocks Marked by Weight, Shiomi's Water Music or Patterson's Instruction No. 2 -
should all be seen not as art works or even multiples, but in their intended context: as
publications, albeit quite different from what is traditionally thought of as a publication. This
seeming alteration in Fluxus' aims is not just a historical note, for it was remarked on by
several Fluxus artists and it was one of the motivations for Higgins to found Something Else
Press as an attempt to return to the original aims of Fluxus.
Although Something Else Press (SEP) does have its o w n unique place in the history of
alternative publishing, it should also be seen as an expression of the aims of Fluxus to
distribute the 'interesting' things being done. In 1964 Dick Higgins founded S E P in
exasperation over Maciunas' seeming inability to get things published, as well as the seeming
shift-away from what Higgins perceived as the central foci of Fluxus. In a letter to a friend
Higgins remarked that he founded S E P as a way of returning to the aims of 'original
Fluxus'.17 Under the Press imprint, m a n y important books on poetry, happenings,
architecture, experimental literature and fiction, music, and art theory were published.
S E P also published important work by a number of the artists associated with Fluxus,
including Knowles, Patterson, Corner, Schmit, Brecht, Filliou, Spoerri and Higgins himself.
In some ways, Higgins was correct, for the work published by S E P throughout the 1960s and
into the mid-1970s m u c h more clearly conforms to the original Fluxus goals of education,
presentation of a variety of historical and contemporary works, and creation of a distribution
system for interesting materials that would not otherwise be published. In fact, although S E P
would eventually fold under the strain of unresolved financial obligations, it was in its
heyday very successful both in introducing a wider audience to new and experimental work
and in creating a context for continued experimentation in intermedial arts. The greater
immediate success of SEP, when compared to Fluxus, was that Higgins was able to balance a
radical and/or n e w content with a more traditional form, thereby allowing the S E P
publications access to existing distribution systems - particularly the book-publishing system
- which Fluxus was never able to m a k e use of. This very same success has now, in the
historical frame, reversed which of the two ventures is given most attention. Fluxus with its
seemingly greater originality of form and, contrary to stated aims, greater rarity of work, has
n o w become the artistic success, whereas S E P has become an interesting publication venture,
but not an artistic success. If again w e return to Higgins' point that S E P was a renewal of the
original aims that Fluxus had lost sight of and consider this in the current perspective of the
commodification of Fluxus 'art objects', w e are left with a very interesting set of issues. The
reality, however, is that both represented Fluxus and S E P succeeded and failed in differing
ways, and that both of these ventures form part of a larger whole of experimentation in
intermedial arts which so dominated the 1960s and 1970s.18
By the end of the 1960s collective Fluxus activities had reached a low point. After the
explosion of Fluxus publishing activities between 1964 and 1966, the years from 1967 to 1969
were rather unremarkable. Little new work was produced in these years. Fluxus group
performances and public presentations in this period were also practically non-existent. W h a t
was happening was that even though Fluxus had always managed to survive direct conflicts,
the most significant of which was the conflict and even personal animosity over the picketing
of Stockhausen's Originale in 1964, this period was one in which m a n y of the artists'
20 O W E N SMITH
attentions were no longer being focused through Fluxus. In order to contextualise this
situation, it is useful to understand that Fluxus' meaning has always existed in relationship to
is usefulness, and thus w e can look at the downturn in activities in this period as a simple
reflection of a periodic downturn in its immediate, but not long-term, usefulness. Although
m a n y of the individual artists were as active as they had been in the past, m a n y of their
efforts were directed towards differing projects or individual interests rather than collective
or Fluxus work. Higgins and Williams were very busy with Something Else Press; Watts was
involved with a mass-production project called Implosions; Brecht and Filliou were active
with L a Cedille qui Sourit in France; Vautier with his Total Art projects and related
publishing; and Maciunas was putting most of his time and energy into his project of
converting old buildings into artists' lofts (Fluxhouses). Yet through all of this the core of
Fluxus remained; the fact that they were friends w h o enjoyed what each other did. All that
was needed was a reminder of this social basis of Fluxus as a community, and it came in the
late 1960s, not in the form of new public performances, but as Fluxus gatherings for
Fluxfriends. These events began in 1967 with a 'Flux-Christmas-meal-event', and in the
subsequent two years were held on the 31 December and were thus renamed the 'New Year
Eve's Flux-Feast'. Although these gatherings did not smooth over all of the tensions between
different members of Fluxus, they did act to return Fluxus to part of its essence - a Fluxus
based on a group of friends doing things together that they enjoyed. Activities such as these,
as well as other Fluxus-related developments in such areas as California, France and
Germany, also began to widen the circle of Fluxus participants to include new artists such as
Geoff Hendricks, Larry Miller and K e n Friedman. This would give a new energy to Fluxus
and carry it into the 1970s, and eventually into new endeavours, such as those carried out
under the n a m e 'Fluxshoe' in England.
NOTES
1 Jean-Pierre Wilhelm, [untitled manuscript], Sept 1962, Archive Sohn, Staatsgalerie,
Stuttgart. A s far as can be determined, this text was not the exact text read by Wilhelm
at the Dusseldorf Fluxus Festival. It is a text that he wrote as an introduction for a
proto-Fluxus performance in Amsterdam, 'Parallele auffuhrungen newster musik';
however it is probably very similar to what he did read in Dusseldorf.
2 George Maciunas, 'Fluxus Manifesto', nd [cl963], Archive Sohn, Staatsgalerie,
Stuttgart.
3 Dick Higgins, Constellation No 4, 1960; reproduced in Higgins, Selected Early Works,
1955-1964, Berlin, Edition A R S VIVA!, 1982, p 4.
4 George Maciunas, In Memoriam to Adriano Olivetti; revised version of score no. 8 1962,
Archive Sohn, Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart.
5 Dick Higgins, Postface/'Jefferson's Birthday, N e w York: Something Else Press, 1964.
M a n y aspects of the original aims and concerns of Fluxus are discussed by Higgins in
the Postface section of this work.
6 Dick Higgins, Postface/Jefferson's Birthday, N e w York: Something Else Press, 1964.
7 George Brecht, 'George Brecht an Interview with Robin Page for Carla Liss (who Fell
Asleep)', Art and Artists, vol 7, no. 7 (Oct 1972), p 29.
8 Higgins, Postface/Jefferson's Birthday, p 68.
9 George Maciunas, quoted in Jackson M a c L o w , 'Wie George Maciunas die N e w
Yorker Avantgarde kennenlernte', in Rene Block, ed, 1962 Wiesbaden 1982, Wiesbaden,
DEVELOPING A FLUXABLE F O R U M 21
The 1970s saw Fluxus in flux, and this state, fluxion, is evident across the surprising range of
Fluxus activity from 1970 to 1982. It is impossible to follow every thread of Fluxus through
this period; the scattering of documented exhibitions, performances and discourses fail to
give any indication of the actual spread of Fluxus ideas. However, a debate within and
around Fluxus as to its actual constituency continued throughout the decade, in the form of
drunken debates and letters to periodicals; in the blossoming field of Correspondence Art;
and in the organisation of catalogues, collections and exhibition tours.
Several changing versions of Fluxus survived. O n e of these was an increasingly
conventional art movement, circumscribed by major retrospective shows and documented
in official publications. Another was an international network of comrades - including some
from the 'original' Fluxus tour - connected by ideology, friendship, and shared working
practices. These laid-back activists often prepared to travel anywhere to perform, read, play,
or simply connect with like minds. They generated a set of hilarious and libertarian ideas
which were passed from hand to mouth - or from mailbox to mailbox - across the provinces
of the coca-colonised world, mostly on a level that generated no more objective evidence than
a fading mimeographed flyer, saved for posterity by accident rather than design.
The decade opened with thefirstgreat m o n u m e n t of Fluxus history, the exhibition and
catalogue 'Happening & Fluxus'.1 A t this time happenings were an international and
formally recognisable phenomena. The exhibition was accompanied by a graphically
utilitarian series of catalogues whose rudimentary use of chronology and alphabet posited a
Fluxus firmly in the realm of advanced art activity, linking it explicitly with a documentable
happenings movement. Unfortunately, the association created by the title also implied
stylistic parity. The fact that some artists were upset by this identification illustrates some of
the issues that have continued to dog Fluxus: w h o has the right to define it, and on what
bases should those definitions be made? 2
The collector D r Hans S o h m and his co-organiser, Harald Szeernann, mounted an
important and impressive exhibition. Beset by difficulties and personal antagonisms -
although to what extent these were apparent to visitors is n o longer clear - the show
generated a document that has become a landmark in the history of Fluxus. In addition to an
annotated chronology of actions and events from 1959 to 1970 (taking up more than half the
book), the catalogue of the exhibition included a general bibliography covering the same
span and an inclusive alphabetical list of artists or artist groups from Andersen to Zaj, with
details of published work, photographs and bibliographies for each.
FLUXUS, FLUXION, FLUXSHOE 23
At the close of the decade came a similar, if rather more deliberately selective, series of
emanations. The year 1981 saw the impressive public launch of the Silverman Collection.3 In
celebration of Fluxus' official twentieth birthday, there were also three exhibitions, a festival
and a symposium held in Wiesbaden. 4 The catalogues generated by this flurry of historic
activity both attempted chronologies and alphabetical lists, but again, reflected different
views of Fluxus. T h e Wiesbaden birthday, riven with contradictions, argument and
celebration, stood in sharp contrast to the Silverman's Fluxus, which passed exclusively
through the 'pure process' of the great organiser, George Maciunas.5
The Silverman Collection was opened to the public in an exhibition held at the Cranbrook
Academy of Art M u s e u m , from 20 September to 1 November 1981. The show highlighted
published objects from Gilbert and Lila Silverman's considerable accumulation of Fluxus
ephemera. Organised around the central principle that the presence of George Maciunas is
the most appropriate measure of Fluxus-ness, it presented a picture of Fluxus that some
artists have repudiated. T o m a s Schmit did so in his contribution to the catalogue that
accompanied the Cranbrook show. 6 Offering reproductions of enormous numbers of objects
and graphic material, m a n y the product of Maciunas' fascinating and fertile brain, it carries,
without editorial comment, an enumerated catalogue of objects, boxes and documentary
fragments generated by historic events, posters, postages stamps and games. Thefirstof
several such catalogues documenting their holdings, it continued the Silverman's enduring
contribution to Fluxus scholarship.
The criterion thatfiltersthe Silverman collection, understandable though it is, created a
Fluxus without the messy, uncategorisable, vague and shifting connections that often seem to
characterise European Fluxus. Sharp differences, however, are not always easy tofind,for
much as the scene in Europe included a host of American visitors w h o put their individual
stamp on interpretations of Fluxus, so Maciunas m a d e Fluxus a vehicle for a variety of
aesthetic, social, political and art-historical experiments as the decade progressed. The strict
reading of Fluxus implicit in the Silverman Collection, whilst being evolutionary in some
ways, and of necessity being museologically correct, cannot do justice to the kinds of
American Fluxus activities that developed on the West Coast, outside N e w York, or even
through Charlotte Moorman's N e w York Festivals of the Avant-Garde, which Maciunas
deprecated almost obsessively, it seems. However, he continued to expand the Fluxus canon
almost up to his death, including such media pranks as Twelve Big Names, of April 1975; the
development of the Fluxlabyrinth, and the continuing tradition of N e w Year reunions - a
tradition disparaged by T o m a s Schmit as 'jokey parties with coloured drinks and
manipulated food'.7
Perhaps Maciunas would also have cavilled at the twentieth anniversary in Wiesbaden,
which offered an ironic celebration of Fluxus' advance toward Art History. Spread
throughout the town, occupying not only the m u s e u m where Fluxus had begun, but a local
Kunstverein and another commercial gallery, Harlekin Art, whose owner, Michael Berger,
was one of the sponsors of the occasion. The exhibitions travelled to Kassel and closed in
Berlin's daadgaXzrie, after a series of new and historic performances and practices. This was
a prescient mixture of Fluxuses; not quite the Fluxus later to be k n o w n through catalogue
essays, centred on objects, multiples and endless texts; nor yet the heroic Fluxus that had
generated so m u c h frenzy two decades before; but a shifting coalition of artists united by
24 S I M O N A N D E R S O N
their past and surrounded by a network of supporters: new friends, collectors, the
occasional dealer, and, increasingly, embryonic Fluxus historians. Fluxion was evident in
the rancour that existed at times between artists, as well as in aspects of the exhibitions and
celebrations.
During the weekend of opening events, Fluxus was represented by such stylistic variations
as Geoffrey Hendricks' meditative ritual installation, an aggressive electronic opera by Wolf
Vostell, and Giuseppe Chiari's gestural music. In addition, there were concerts of early
Fluxus works, sometimes performed by the composers; a reinterpretation, by the artist, of
Ben Patterson's Lick; and opportunities to play fluxping-pong and other games in the
museum. Alongside the Fluxlabyrinth was its apparent antithesis: the tie that Paik used to
begin thefirstever Zen for Head, preserved as a reliquary; and in a piano-concert scene that
surely opposed Maciunas' idea of Fluxus, Fred Rzewski's hands were filmed in close-up, for
German TV.
The monochrome catalogue that accompanied the exhibitions echoes the graphic severity
and apparent neutralityfirstadopted by 'Happening & Fluxus'. Once again, documentary
evidence of past Fluxus events was shown alongside a wide variety of contemporary work,
ranging from astrological charts by Ludwig Gosewitz to Yoshimasa Wada's instrumental
installations. Although leavened by Filliou and William's anarchic cataloguing system, the
texts included were serious and written with an eye to history. The infra mince element within
Fluxus is evident in the illustrated chronologies and itemised personal narratives that
supplement the essays: these included a wide variety of voices, from Henning Christiansen to
Henry Flynt, and notable were Jackson M a c Low's account of the genesis of An Anthology and
Emmett Williams' reportage. The catalogue makes no claims, however, to complete historical
coverage and is organised around individual artists rather than publisher or medium.
A similar alphabetical and individual-oriented approach had been used some years earlier
by Harry Ruhe, in his thorough and wide-ranging index, Fluxus: The Most Radical and
Experimental Art Movement of the Sixties.8 This ring-bound document resulted from his
earlier exhibition of Fluxus at Gallery A in Amsterdam, in 1976. The ruggedly stylish book
provides an expanded and expandable reading of Fluxus; the editor quoted Maciunas'
blacklist in his introduction, but offered fair justification of his inclusions. Ruhe's Fluxus was
fluid enough to contain tenuous historic connections such as Marcel Alocco and Tamas
Szentjoby along with more traditionally contentious inclusions such as Joseph Beuys.
Obscure entries, such as Bob Grimes and Bob Lens or George Landow and Dan Lauffer,
form an informative exploration of Fluxus ideas, appropriately opening with Maurizio
Nannucci's 150 questions on the subject.
Also ring-bound, and intended to expand, though smaller in size and scope, Fluxus
International & Cie likewise added to the Fluxus stable, but took pains to distinguish new
associates such as John Armleder, Patrick Lucchini and other members of the Ecart
Performance Group.9 Featuring texts and event scores by Fluxus artists and an essay by
Charles Dreyfus, the catalogue is an early effort to analyse Fluxus historically, stylistically
and philosophically. It is organised using a complex classification system, illustrating
different versions of Fluxus. Composed of history, music, words and posters, and including
charts, manifestos, artists' statements, a chronology of events from 1951 to 1964, and a
section devoted to Correspondence Art, it was a fertile breeding ground for Fluxus ideas.
FLUXUS, FLUXION, FLUXSHOE 25
sown and nurtured by Ken Friedman,12 but grew into an international festival of live,
graphic and published art works, with dozens of participants, hundreds of correspondents,
and thousands of spectators. Moving to the operational base of Beau Geste Press - a low-
tech co-operative art-publishing venture run by a c o m m u n e headed by Martha and Felipe
Ehrenberg, David Mayor, and others - the tour was basically sponsored by government and
regional grants, and, although very different, each show was centred upon the same portable
and flexible core of Fluxus material: mailed stuff from Friedman and his infinite
correspondents, a number of Fluxboxes sent by Maciunas, and a large amount of printed
matter given or loaned by artists, D r Hans S o h m and other interested individuals.13
'Fluxshoe' exemplifies the general style of Fluxus in the 1970s in many ways. It was
determinedly international and was constituted around a few 'stars' from the early days of
Fluxus. The still relatively young survivors from thefirstfew years travelled widely, singly or
in pairs, and spread their individual - and often different - interpretations of Fluxus at each
venue. ThefirstbonafideFluxus artist to appear during 'Fluxshoe' was Eric Andersen, who
had been associated with Fluxus since 1963, when, with other members of the 'gruppe fra
eksperimentalmalerskolen', he had given a Fluxus concert in Copenhagen. In 1972
Andersen's notable contribution to the leisure activities of the seaside town of Falmouth
was Random Audience - a. participation piece in which he offered members of the public
'FREE D R I N K , F R E E M U S I C , F R E E SEX', handing out a printed notice to this effect,
with the date and time of the offering handwritten on it. If anyone was brave enough to show
up at the allotted time and place, they found a notice announcing a change of time and venue.
If they were then persistent enough to catch up with him, they would find him armed with a
bottle of whisky, a portable cassette player, a vibrator and a rubber vagina.
Fellows Danes K n u d Pedersen and Per Kirkeby - both Fluxus artists by virtue of early
association or published work - also appeared during the tour. Kirkeby performed an
understated Event: a jigsaw puzzle that he failed to complete, despite the help of visitors.
Pedersen organised, among other participatory actions, a two-balled soccer match - an
entertaining and educative intervention into normal expectations that asked a whole series of
questions about what constitutes art, a game, competition, a goal, and so on. This tightly
organised and fascinating public spectacle was re-created by Pedersen some twenty years
later as part of an exhibition, at the Tate Gallery, London.
Fluxus' early and vital links with Japan were well represented both in 'Fluxshoe' and
Mayor's other concern, Beau Geste Press. Takako Saito infused both with her delicate
aesthetic, and Mayor's base outside Exeter was visited by the Taj Mahal Travellers - or at
least a contingent from that group - consisting of Takehisa Kosugi, Yukio Tsuchiya, Ryo
and Hiroko Koike. Kosugi himself had been a cofounder, with Mieko Shiomi, of the
experimental music group Group Ongaku, in 1961, and had worked in the early to mid-1960s
with a whole range of internationally renowned artists and musicians from Toru Takemitsu
to Robert Rauschenberg, including Ichiyanagi, Cage, Paik and Vostell. His involvement with
Fluxus began early, and he had a collection of events published, which were included in the
first Fluxus Yearbox.
Ay-O was originally to have re-created the N e w York Fluxshop for 'Fluxshoe', but
instead built a site-specific environment, threading string through the banisters of the stairs at
Oxford's M u s e u m of Modern Art. H e also performed events so subtle that most people
FLUXUS, FLUXION, FLUXSHOE 27
ignored them. It would seem that Ay-O's understanding of Fluxus meant that he felt justified
in simply talking to people, perhaps performing very simple and delicate Events, such as
simply sitting and burning small pyres built of matches, watched by only one or two people.
This rejection of formality - which pervaded 'Fluxshoe' to its core - was also typical of a
variety of other Fluxus artists throughout the decade, from Robert Filliou's poetical
Research at the Stedelijk (1972), which he used as a framework for extended, international
and poetic conversations about the state of the world, to Maciunas' reliance on games and
sports as a model for cheap, public performance art.
The international roster of artists w h o attended 'Fluxshoe' included Canadians Paul
W o o d r o w and Clive Robertson, plus assorted European performers of varying stature,
including Hungarian stamp artist Endre Tot. It also provided performance opportunities for
local talent, from novices such as Paul Brown to seasoned artists such as Stuart Brisley.
A n American then residing in England, Carolee Schneemann was perhaps the most
experienced performance artist to appear in 'Fluxshoe'. She had become famous for her
sensuous and visceral happening Meat Joy, but she had been a radical filmmaker and
performance-painter since the end of the 1950s.14 Despite the fact that Schneemann had
taken part in the Berlin 'Festum Fluxorum' of 1970, and despite her consistent and persisting
sympathies with Fluxus ideas, Maciunas advised M a y o r that Schneemann was '... doing very
neo-baroque style happenings which are exact opposite of flux-haiku style events ...', thereby
revisiting disagreements about the constitution of Fluxus.15
Giancarlo Politi's Flash Art, sometime supporter of Fluxus artists collectively and
individually, stirred this debate by accusing 'Fluxshoe' of expansion to the point of
confusion. A notice in this publication characterised 'Fluxshoe' as a mere approximation of
Maciunas' philosophy, and that the show included artists w h o 'never had any rapport with
fluxus, neither ideological nor esthetic'.16 This generated a spirited but friendly response from
Ken Friedman, who, in his capacity as 'director of fluxus west' (the lower case was de rigeur
at the time) repudiated the notice and quoted his o w n Omaha Flow Systems as proof that
Fluxus was capable of divergence, difference, inclusion and expansion. H e argued that
Fluxus sought to break boundaries, and that these included the rules of traditional art history
as well as bourgeois social practice.
Other artists felt differently. Davi Det H o m p s o n believed that Fluxus as such was over,
and that shows such as 'Happening & Fluxus', 'Fluxshoe' and his o w n 'International
Cyclopedia of Plans and Occurrences' (1973) were proof of that. Admitting to being very
much a second-generation Fluxus artist, he was interested in taking the ideas that Fluxus had
developed and continuing them. O n e of the important ideas of Fluxus, for H o m p s o n , was
that personalities were less important than things and ideas, although he distinguished
between Fluxus and conceptual art on the grounds that Fluxus was not simply ideas alone,
H o m p s o n performed a number of times in Blackburn: in the M u s e u m , where he m a d e
Whispered Writings, a series of circular, self-descriptive texts; and on the street, where he
lectured, using gestures, a blackboard and a gag over his mouth, so that he was
incomprehensible - variations on Fluxus which were very m u c h in keeping with other
events seen on the tour.
O n the other hand, Alice Hutchins, whose 'Jewelry Fluxkits', were produced well into the
1970s, thought Fluxus was still extant, but as a sideline, something given for enjoyment - for
28 SIMON A N D E R S O N
no money was ever made. Much more than for Hompson, Fluxus was centred on objects: she
had never performed, or written an event until offered the opportunity in Oxford, where she
wrote and performed a site-specific event, 102 Stroke Piece, about an ancient college bell. She
outrang 'Great T o m ' and handed round Bell's whisky. It was simple, friendly and
unpretentious; it suited the intimate atmosphere of the evening, and w o n David Mayor's
approval.
'Fluxshoe' was a site of negotiation between classic Fluxus and the new directions taken
by individual artists. Thus, underfunded reconstructions by the schoolboy duo Blitzinforma-
tion, of early Fluxus events by Brecht, Schmit, Maciunas, and so on, were complemented
with their o w n Flux-inspired research into average measurements around Hastings and a
stylistic concept called Tot'. The Taj Mahal Travellers performed interpretations of early
Events, as well as creating their o w n piece, a 24-hour-long jam session at Beau Geste's
farmhouse headquarters.
For some purposes, the events most characteristic of Fluxus' early days - those labelled by
Maciunas as 'mono-structural neo-haiku' - are at an advantage over other, more complex
performances, in that they have a particular portability. The nature of the classic Fluxus
event - simple, funny, even elegant - is such that it creates its o w n atmosphere as part of the
performance. The structure of events, based on the characteristic of being repeatable, yet
unique, each time they are performed, also distinguishes them from other live actions - a
knowingly in-built asset. It is one of the reasons that early Fluxus is so suited to historic
exhibitions, because its intimate atmosphere can be conjured up by anyone willing to spend
time, and a little effort, on their o w n version of Events: m u c h of the potential therein comes
from the score, the particular notation used to describe m a n y Fluxus pieces.
Nevertheless, not all Fluxus pieces work in this fashion. M a n y straddle the borderline
between subtle, intimate event and complex action, and it is presumably this mixture that
David M a y o r wished to promote in 'Fluxshoe'. The valuable openness and multivalence of
the Fluxus Event, with instructions as flexible as they are specific, meant that, in 'Fluxshoe',
Fluxus was allowed to live on and change form, evolving to suit the various personalities and
circumstances of each situation. Occasionally the deviation was so radical that Fluxus m a y
have been misrepresented: anyone w h o saw Ian Breakwell in Nottingham or Su Braden at
Oxford has a different idea of Fluxus to that of Dick Higgins or others a m o n g the early
Fluxus core. This is not necessarily a bad thing, particularly as few of that generation, or the
subsequent generations of Y o u n g Fluxus propagated by Maciunas, Friedman, Block, et al,
have ceased to elaborate personal styles of their o w n - each in varying proximity to their idea
of flux. Giuseppe Chiari, when asked if he was still a Fluxus artist responded: ' H o w could I
say no, from the m o m e n t that Fluxus is only a name. Fluxus is the most indefinite thing I
k n o w .. .'17
The changing and varied interpretations were disseminated by two interconnected spheres
of activity closely affiliated with Fluxus - Correspondence Art and small-press publishing
both of which were inextricably associated with 'Fluxshoe'. The rise in popularity of Artists'
books, an increasing use of the international postal system as medium, and the widespread
diffusion of Fluxus ideas outside the gallery system occurred simultaneously but not
coincidently. Fluxus was formed around publishing, and sympathetic ideas were promoted
from the beginning by efforts such as Vostell's de-collage and Something Else Press. In the
FLUXUS, FLUXION, F L U X S H O E 29
1970s fluxion was encouraged by dozens of small presses across the world, which published a
wide range of Fluxus-inspired work, or work by artists who still felt an affinity with Fluxus.
From Albrecht d's heavily political FlugFLUXblattzeitung to Pawel Petasz's nomadic mail-
art magazine Commonpress, variations of Fluxus ideas permeated the art world at a
deliberately extra-institutional level. Only rarely did more commercial periodicals spread
Fluxus ideas or widen the debate. Flash Art publisher Giancarlo Politi was a regular
promoter of Fluxus ideas cooperating with Maciunas on publishing projects; commissioning
Ben Vautier and other sympathetic individuals to contribute artists' pages; compiling a
special edition on Fluxus, Happenings and Performance in 1978. This issue contained
thoughtful commentaries by Higgins, Friedman and Charles Dreyfus, as well as pieces by
Takako Saito, Alison Knowles and George Brecht, and texts by Flynt, Vostell and others.
Earlier in the decade, Britain's Art & Artists had given an issue over to Fluxus, thereby
priming a small audience for 'Fluxshoe'.18 But it was usually the more specialised, even
esoteric, magazines which showed support and extended the interpretation of Fluxus. From
Art Press and Source, to the obscure Spanner, Canal or AQ, the audience was gradually
extended and new connections formed.
Fluxus artists, with their accessibility, ad hoc attitudes, and ever-present humour were a
very visible part of the small-press scene, and also quickly became legendary in
Correspondence Art circles, which were rapidly developing across the world. Fluxus is
consistently quoted as the chief influence on the manners, mores and morals of
Correspondence Art, which admitted neither jury nor fee. Fluxus was initially constituted
through letters, between people like Paik, Brecht or Watts; and several Fluxus artists, such as
Higgins, de Ridder and even Maciunas, continued to operate in correspondence networks
well into the 1970s. Associated artists as diverse as Anna Banana and Robin Crozier were
connected to each other and to Fluxus by post. 'Fluxshoe' was quickly swamped with mail
after the indefatigable Correspondence artist Klaus Groh successfully challenged David
Mayor's definition of Fluxus. Groh's International Artists' Co-operation organisation was in
many ways similar to the Beau Geste Press, but its international commitment meant a higher
profile on the Correspondence Art scene, with the intermittent publication of information
sheets, which acted as databases for mail-art activity. Such centres created a network of
artists who shared the 'attitude towards art' identified as Fluxus.19 They formed a
community based on an international web, generating its own energy, which was a source of
many alternatives from the conventional gallery system. Helped by Ken Friedman's
compilation of a huge address list - one of a number which were circulated virtually freely,
through which sympathetic individuals, institutions, publishers and collectives were all
potentially connected. 'Fluxshoe' became one way of extending this network to the British
provinces: admittance to the exhibition could, if so desired, mean more than simple visual
access to published texts, or even sight of performances - themselves rare opportunities in
1972. With the almost guaranteed assistance of David Mayor, it would have been eminently
possible for any casually inquisitive visitor to gain postal access to everyone concerned, to
discuss live work with the artists present, to interact with the exhibition on a positive level -
to enter the network, in short.
In the network, fluxion accelerated to the point where '[W]hatever one can say about
Fluxus will have usually been true at one point or another .. .'20 It was a matter of 'innovated
30 S I M O N A N D E R S O N
perception', according to Mieko Shiomi;21 or, as George Brecht aphorised the problem, 'if
the fluxfits,wear it'.22
What Fluxus was, who could or could not be considered Fluxus, where Fluxus had gone,
all depended on w h o m one asked, and where they stood in relation to the polarising events of
the 1960s. With the advent of another decade, however, a new generation of acolytes, artists,
historians and fellow-travellers began to emerge, and in the 1980s, the territory was extended
into a broader, more academic debate, shifting from personality and politics to identity and
ideology.
NOTES
1 Hanns Sohm and Harald Szeeman, eds, Happenings and Fluxus, Cologne, Kunstverein
1970.
2 Tomas Schmit, for example, wrote: 'every time I hear the words happening and fluxus
together in the same breath, I shudder as if I saw a carp fuck a duck ...' in 'Free Fluxus
Now\ Special Issue of Art and Artists, vol 7, no. 7, issue 79 (October 1973).
3 The exhibition was accompanied by an elegant and exhaustive catalogue: Jon
Hendricks, ed, Fluxus Etc.: The Gilbert and Lila Silverman Collection, Bloomfield H
MI, Cranbrook Academy of Art, 1981.
4 Rene Block and Anne Marie Freybourg, eds, Wiesbaden Fluxus 1962-1982: Eine kleine
Geschichte von Fluxus in drei Teilen, Wiesbaden and Berlin, 1983.
5 Per Kirkeby, in Hendricks, ed, Fluxus Etc, p 29.
6 Tomas Schmit, in Hendricks, ed, Fluxus Etc.
1 Ibid.
8 Harry Ruhe, Fluxus: The Most Radical and Experimental Art Movement of the Sixties
Amsterdam, 'A', 1979.
9 Fluxus International & Cie., Nice, 1979.
10 Review of performances at the Kitchen, N e w York, Flash Art, nos. 90-91 (July 1979),
p49.
11 Peter Frank, 'Fluxus Fallout', Visible Language, 26 (1992).
12 Friedman was responsible for Fluxus activity, exhibitions and archives or resource
centres across America and Europe, including 'Fluxshoe', which is now held in the
archives of the Tate Gallery, London, and Iowa University, among many others.
13 The infrastructure of the exhibition was designed by Martha Ehrenberg, and consisted
of a series of cardboard screens which, in addition to reflecting the ad hoc nature of
some Fluxus emanations, could be modulated tofitthe many different kinds of space
occupied by 'Fluxshoe'.
14 First performed at the 'Festival de la Libre Expression', Paris, 1964.
15 David Mayor, ed, Fluxshoe, Cullompton, 1972.
16 Flash Art, no. 38. Friedman's response was published in Flash Art, no. 40; David
Mayor's response was not, I believe, published at all.
17 Giuseppe Chiari, interview with Helena Kontova, Flash Art, nos. 84-5 (October-
November 1978).
18 Free Fluxus Now.
19 Ben Vautier's definition of Fluxus in Flash Art, nos. 84-5.
20 Friedman, Flash Art, nos. 84-5.
21 Mieko [Chieko] Shiomi, in Hendricks, ed, Fluxus Etc.:
22 Brecht, Flash Art, nos. 84-5.
HANNAH HIGGINS:
FLUXUS FORTUNA
Fluxus artist George Brecht has compared Fluxus to a Wheel of Fortune, as moving in place
and time, as an object of some uncertainty whose stopping point is not yet clear. H e is
certainly not alone in the assignation of a gaming spirit to the group. There are m a n y artists
working in the rich tradition of Flux-games. Robert Filliou, for instance, m a d e a spinner of
twenty-four different hands and a dial in 1964. Filliou's wheel exposes the irony in Brecht's
statement. Where the wheel of Fluxus stops is not the point, since the hands are both
different and the same. Fixed ends, it seems, are anathema to the idea of 'fluxing' or flowing,
as m a n y Fluxus scholars and artists have pointed out over the years.
It does not follow, however, that Fluxus is anything and everything. In the words of
Kristine Stiles, Fluxus is a 'voluntary association' of people.2 A s such, Fluxus is as diverse in its
beliefs and practices as any sociality is. Thus, unless the artists are subject to an overriding
ideological interpretation of their beliefs and actions, they will show themselves to be both
highly pluralistic and in some form of communication (both by agreement and disagreement)
with each other. Testimony for Brecht's truism lies in and around the variety of Fluxus
activities described by m y colleagues in the preceding two parts of this historical survey.
Clearly this sociological description of Fluxus is limited as to interpretive frameworks -
this despite m y using it in several other contexts over the years. For this construction only
allows the group to be a group - another 'art clique'. W h a t is more, the sociology of Fluxus
does not begin to address the more significant issue of w h y w e care about it. Stiles helps us to
untangle the bigger issue here, of h o w this collective body engenders specific forms of art. She
writes that 'Fluxus artists place their living bodies between the material and mental worlds ...
[which] negotiate degrees of h u m a n freedom in relations between the private and social
worlds - directions that recall philosophical descriptions of the phenomenological character
of the body as an instrument acting in the world'.3 A provisional unpacking of these
insightful lines would go something like this: as private individuals and members of a social
grouping, the specific performance actions of Fluxus artists embody a range of potential
experiences that connect them socially and philosophically to the world at large. It follows
that, both by being Fluxus artists and by performing as a group in 'voluntary association'
over time, layers of connections between 'the material and mental worlds' and the world at
32 HANNAH HIGGINS
large, are made. If this connectedness is turned to objects, Filliou's wheel, which is
performative when a viewer turns it, embodies both an abstract conception of philosophical
and experiential open-endedness, as well as a viable application of that concept in life lived.
Given these precedents it is not surprising that when George Maciunas was organising the
first Fluxus-titled concerts for a G e r m a n tour in 1962, he contacted M a r y Bauermeister to see
if she might host a Fluxus concert in her atelier.6 Maciunas also listed Stockhausen in the first
four lists of possible contributors to his Fluxus magazine.7
However, these overtures to Stockhausen represented a degree of compromise on
Maciunas' part. Paik, w h o had studied with Stockhausen and w h o performed in the
Bauermeister atelier, aided Maciunas in organising thefirstfestivals identified with the name
Fluxus, so Maciunas' connection to Stockhausen results in part from Paik's professional debt
to him.8 Correspondence during 1962 between Paik and Maciunas confirms this claim. Paik
supported Stockhausen's inclusion in Fluxus magazine on the grounds of this debt and the
merit of his work, while Maciunas criticised Stockhausen's professional ambition. This early
disagreement as to Stockhausen's relevance suggests that Fluxus might later be divided with
regard to Stockhausen.
A n d divided it was when Stockhausen's multimedia opera Originale was performed at
Charlotte Moorman's 1964 Annual N e w York Festival of the Avant-Garde. O n one side of
the divide, a 'list of participants' in the concert programme names Fluxus members N a m
June Paik, Dick Higgins, Jackson M a c L o w , Joe Jones and George Brecht as performers and
exhibitors. O n the other side of the divide, there is a photograph showing Fluxus members
Ben Vautier, Takako Saito, George Maciunas and Henry Flynt protesting against the same
concert.9 Contributing to the confusion, at least two artists - Dick Higgins and Allan
K a p r o w - both demonstrated against and performed in the concert, indicating a high degree
of fluidity between the choice of entering or not.10
In contradistinction to this pluralistic situation, the press described a uniformly activist
Fluxus. For example, Time magazine reported on the demonstrators:
The opening at Judson Hall could not have been more auspicious; it was picketed by a
rival group calling itself 'Fluxus,' bearing signs: 'Fight the rich man's snob art.'11
Albeit from the other side of the political spectrum, The Nation responded in similarly
homogeneous terms, where "they" means Fluxus:
They are also against 'the rich U.S. cretins [Leonard] Bernstein and [Benny] Goodman.'
Their aim is to promote jazz ('black music') and not to promote more art ('there is too
much already').12
It is accurate to say that both articles about the demonstration imply a point of contact
between one faction of Fluxus - consisting of the demonstrators - and the press, w h o
describe the actions of the demonstrators as indicative of a group ideology: 'Fluxus, bearing
signs' against 'rich cretins'. Thus the coverage of the demonstration, while originating from
34 H A N N A H HIGGINS
terms 'Fluxus' and 'Policy' in the title, so it pretended to speak for the group as 'Fluxus'
while it described a 'Proposed Propaganda Action for N o v e m b e r Fluxus in N . Y . C This
action, while only 'proposed', nevertheless indicated a potential intersection of policy and
practice that was precisely terrorist and identified with the group n a m e Fluxus.
The responses of members to Fluxus News-Policy-Letter No. 6 were generally negative.
Jackson M a c L o w , for instance, wrote a lengthy critique dated 25 April 1962:
I'm not opposed to serious culture - quite the contrary. I'm all for it & I hope &
consider that m y o w n work is a genuine contribution to it... [N]o blunderbuss attack
against culture (serious or otherwise) as a whole ... will do anything to remedy what's
wrong in the present situation. I a m not at all against art or music or drama or
literature, old or new. I'm against the overbalance of museum culture ... as against
present-minded and presently 'useful' cultural activities and would certainly like to see
the balance tipped the other way, but I would not want to eliminate museums (I like
museums).
Similar sentiments are echoed in other letters to Maciunas from, a m o n g others, George
Brecht, Dick Higgins, N a m June Paik and T o m a s Schmit. A letter to Dick Higgins and
Alison Knowles indicated Maciunas' opinion of these responses. H e wrote:
I do not understand your statement (& Jackson's) that 'there is no point in antagonizing
the very people and classes that we are most interested in converting.' Terrorism that is
very clearly directed ... can reduce the attendance of the masses to these decadent
institutions. W e will increase the chance that they will turn their attention to Fluxus.
In the context of the saboteur's agenda laid out here, to 'understand' would m e a n to accept
the equivocal positions against Fluxus News-Policy-Letter No. 6, which assumed a uniformly
oppressive relationship between all cultural institutions and the unenlightened public. M a c
Low's criticism of the newsletter's policy suggested, on the other hand, that this relationship
is not necessarily oppressive, although it m a y be in some cases, and that an effective critique
of it does not necessarily extend to its destruction. The criticism of the newsletter's policy
contradicts both Maciunas' ideology and the uniform radicalism traditionally ascribed to
avant-gardes, where artistically expressed social or aesthetic criticism metamorphoses into a
critique specifically aimed at the institutions of art.16
Other responses indicated a multivalent politics of Fluxus. A letter from Maciunas to
Emmett Williams, Daniel Spoerri and Robert Filliou describes the situation:
Brecht blew his top off because proposals were getting too terroristic and aggressive,
Henry Flynt thought they were too 'artistic,' too m u c h 'serious culture' as he calls it.
Jackson M a c L o w thought they were not serious enough. Each is pulling in different
directions .. ,17
In a transparent attempt to diffuse the situation, Maciunas wrote in the next newsletter that:
This Newsletter 6 was not intended as a decision, settled plan or dictate, but rather as a
synthetic proposal or rather a signal, stimulus to start a discussion among, and an
invitation for proposals from - the recipients.
If w e are to take Maciunas at his word here, then Fluxus News-Policy-Letter No. 6 intended
to generate a polyvocal Fluxus. However, such democratic interests, if they ever existed, were
clearly temporary.
36 H A N N A H H I G G I N S
W h e n the demonstration flier against Stockhausen employed the same terminology as the
earlier Fluxus News-Policy-Letter No. 6, it naturally irritated many of the same people. The
flier called for all radical thinkers to protest against Stockhausen in the interests of non-
racist, revolutionary thinking; according to an over-determined identification of Stockhausen
with philosopher Theodor Adorno's anti-ethnic claims for the separation of modern art and
mass culture. Maciunas probably knew, or might have anticipated, that this language would
activate the conflicts created by the newsletter a year earlier.
Maciunas charted these conflicts in his 'Fluxus (Its Historical Development and
Relationship to Avant-Garde Movements)', which marks the expulsion of several of these
artists at precisely those moments when they challenged his leadership of Fluxus. These
artists' names appear under the rubric 'Fluxus Group' above the year 1961 marked at the
bottom of the chart. A vertical line concludes the memberships of Jackson M a c Low, Tomas
Schmit and Emmett Williams in 1963, the year of the newsletter controversy. Later
exclusions, this time of Philip Corner, Dick Higgins, Alison Knowles, Ben Patterson, N a m
June Paik and Kosugi, occur in 1964, the year of the Stockhausen incident. Finally, a
prehistory for Fluxus appears in the historic section to the far left of the chart, which
establishes a history for Fluxus in jokes, gags, collage, the historic avant-garde and Brutisrh,
among other things. With a basis in movements and activities traditionally described as
uniformly outside of modernist traditions, this pre-history prefigures the exclusion of artists
who chose a complex relationship, as opposed to a merely reactive one, to those traditions.
However, all of the eliminated artists participated in later Fluxus events, meaning that
they continued to work with other Fluxus artists, including Maciunas. This situation suggests
that Maciunas attempted to purge Fluxus in order to realise the ideal of a 'united front' of
Fluxus, but that he never had the power to permanently expel anyone. Thus, although this
graph is misleading as an index of those working within the group, it does index relative
adherence to Maciunas' position.
What is more, the chart shows ideological placement and positions Fluxus within a
historical avant-garde thematic. Accordingly, Maciunas' activist vision, his dynamic
conception of the relationship between the historic and contemporary avant-garde, and his
ability to define this relationship for a given member, determined Fluxus membership. The
diagonal lines of influence that move along the timeline into and out of Fluxus imply the
historicist aspect of this determinacy. This chart is, therefore, the graphic equivalent of
Maciunas' representation of Fluxus to the world as a historically validated form of avant-
garde activism. If these judgements are taken for truth, the chart is also a justification for the
historicist aspect of the Maciunas-based paradigm, which ends with his death - the last
judgement.
The activist and united features of Maciunas' representation of the group to the media, as
demonstrated in the media coverage of the Stockhausen incident, as well as the subsequent
exclusion of work that was inconsistent with this representation, m a y explain why critics in
the United States then and n o w take a point of view that corresponds to Maciunas' very
public publications, advertisements, and demonstrations. For example, although several
artists have exhibited in galleries prior to and during their association with Fluxus, and even
though thefirstFluxus concert in Germany took place in a museum concert-hall, Artforum
critic Melissa Harris wrote that 'though the opportunity to see this superb work is more than
FLUXUS FORTUNA 37
welcome, this exhibition is inevitably somewhat problematic, given that the gallery context
feels antithetical to ... the work'.19 The inevitability of the work's being 'antithetical' to the
gallery setting suggests that this critic has internalised the vision of Fluxus established by
Maciunas. A s the various examples in this introduction suggest, Fluxus is inevitably
problematic in, but not antithetical to, the gallery setting. Furthermore, the comparison of
early and recent criticism indicates that what critics applaud today - the anti-institutional
antics of Fluxus implied by Harris - is precisely what most frustrated critics in the 1960s.
In conclusion, the anti-institutional reading by critics reflects a version of Fluxus
constructed by Maciunas and supported by some Fluxus artists. W h a t remains to be seen,
however, is the relationship between the values implicit in this reading and a broader
context - more specifically, the place of this reading in the socio-political climate of the
world today. Fluxus is simultaneously a diverse and deeply committed group of artists w h o
disagree on m u c h , but w h o continue to find each other's company valuable, useful and
fertile. The only w a y to understand Fluxus today is to accept this untidy ideological and
practical package. F e w curators or critics are willing to d o so, and as they seek to
homogenise, delimit and contain Fluxus work, they do a certain kind of violence to its most
noteworthy success - its endurance over time and its ability to sustain difference within
itself as a source of vitality.
RECENT FLUXUS
There is n o disputing that interest - both from the artists and public - in Fluxus waned
somewhat throughout the 1970s. Indeed, m a n y Fluxus artists developed successful
independent careers throughout that decade - N a m June Paik, Joseph Beuys, Wolf Vostell
and Y o k o O n o all c o m e to mind A s the 1970s drew to a close, however, Fluxus came
together once again as a community alliance, certainly in part owing to the death of George
Maciunas. Thus, since m y period in this three-part chronology of Fluxus incorporates
elements from immediately prior to the memorial events and publications following
Maciunas' death from pancreatic cancer in 1978, to the anniversary festivals of 1982 and
1992, the time-frame of this section is not properly Fluxus for those people w h o effectively
close the historical narrative at 1978. It is this author's opinion, however, that Fluxus
continues to exist, because Fluxus artists continue to choose each other as collaborators and
muses. However, outside forces such as publishers, curators and enthusiasts of Fluxus have
also played significant roles in creating contexts within which this remarkable group of artists
can continue to survive as a body politic.
Italy
The role outside forces in helping to maintain the vitality of Fluxus is especially strong in the
Italian and G e r m a n contexts. Notably, the publishing venture called Pari & Dispari, which
was run by the collector and dealer Rosanna Chiesi in the 1970s in Reggio-Emilia, Italy,
consisted essentially of a rambling house, courtyard and delapidated barn where artists could
go and produce editions. N o t just Fluxus artists, but also H e r m a n n Nitsch (of Vienna
Actionism) and others, could be found living and working at Reggio-Emilia often for several
weeks or months during a larger sojourn. The editions were often difficult to produce, and
38 H A N N A H H I G G I N S
occasionally work was stretched out over several years, requiring artists to make several
return trips. In this manner, Pari & Dispari constituted an artists' community that consisted
in large part of artists associated with Fluxus. It played a pivotal role in the continuation of
the Fluxus community and continues to do so today as a relocated and renamed Fondazione
Chiesi in Capri.
Also pivotal in understanding the backbone of activity throughout the 1970s is the
comparatively larger function of Conz Editions, run by Francesco Conz in Verona, Italy. For
several Fluxus artists, Fluxus in the 1970s was held together by Conz, a committed publisher,
collector and publicist for the group. Like Chiesi, Conz has an interest in other groups;
Viennese Aktionismus (Austria), Gruppe Zaj (Spain) and the artists of Image Bank (Canada)
are all arguably linked to the greater community of Fluxus through the concept of intermedia
(meaning work that falls between traditional media, such as visual poems and so on). 20 In
particular, Conz has produced close collaborations with individual Fluxus artists, as well as
with the entire group. While Conz at one time produced paper editions, his most significant
contribution has been the translation on to large cloth panels of a wide range of Fluxus artists'
work such as games, recipes and object images, under the name Edizione Francesco Conz.21
In addition to these editions, Conz has explored the individual identity of each artist in his
commissioning of artist 'fetish' objects. These are collections of performance detritis and
articles from the lives of Fluxus artists that were not originally intended for exhibition. With
a wink toward the self-deprecating stance of many collectors that is often coupled with a
strong desire to interact in the lives of the artists they collect, these objects exemplify Conz's
close personal relationship with a remarkably broad range of Fluxus artists. Significantly,
Henry Martin, an American expatriate, critic and supporter of Fluxus, has written in several
contexts for Conz as well and has produced a significant commentary on George Brecht's
Book of the Tumbler on Fire?2 For the anniversary year of 1992, Martin organised a Bolzano
Fluxus, called rather fetchingly 'Fluxers', which moved to Molvena, Italy, under the auspices
of the Fluxus collector Luigi Bonotto. For that exhibition, Martin curated a print portfolio
by twelve Fluxus artists.
These examples alone suggest that Italy has produced extensive and expansive support for
Fluxus since the mid-1970s, when Conz and Chiesi became highly active. The greatest degree
of visibility for Fluxus in Italy, and perhaps in the international art world, came through the
exhibition 'Ubi Fluxus, ibi Motus', which occupied a pavilion at the 1990 Venice Biennale.
Gino DiMaggio, a major and comparatively recent supporter of Fluxus whose M u D i M a
Museum in Milan features Fluxus, coordinated the exhibition and published a catalogue for
the show. Achille Bonito Oliva, a well-known Italian curator and historian of the avant-
garde, curated the show. His curatorial statement in the catalogue suggests that an Italian
heritage, namely, Futurism and the Italian Renaissance, was as essential for Fluxus as the
more commonly evoked German Dadaism. 'The synthesis of the arts', he wrote, 'is an
ancient aspiration of the modern avant-gardes, ranging from Futurism to Dadaism, but it
was also included in the classical dimensions of the Italian Renaissance.'23
In contrast to this primarily historic justification for Fluxus, the 'Presentazione', or
opening statement, by Giovanni Carandente, suggests a point of entry specifically aimed at
the Maciunas problem. H e writes:
FLUXUS FORTUNA 39
To push Fluxus toward the twenty-first century means to grasp the group's anti-
historicist spirit. Hence the decision to invert history, the chronology and the itinerary
of the exhibition: not from 1962 to 1990 but from 1990 to 1962. In this way prejudices
favouring noble fathers or the past do not exist. It is the present that becomes the point o
departure.24
While this statement attempts to eradicate the historicity of Fluxus, it does reflect th
'futurist' impulse of the historic avant-garde, which attempted to break with the past to
reinvent the present, and, by extension, to redefine possibilities for the future. Perhaps
because there was comparatively little Fluxus activity in Italy in the 1960s, the contemporary
present dominates the catalogue almost entirely, insofar as Oliva theorises Fluxus as a reverse
chronology of practices that looks to the past without being determined by it. The elastic
social frameworks that underlie Fluxus practice, particularly as located in the contexts of
Italy (through Conz and Chiesi), supports such a reading.
In summary, 'Ubi Fluxus, ibi Motus' as a whole conveyed the palpable diversity within
Fluxus by emphasising present work in the exhibition and a mix of present and historic work
in the catalogue. The latter tries to historicise the present moment of Fluxus while the group's
ongoing internal dialogue creates tension within the historic framework. Thus, in the same
catalogue, the Fluxus artist Joe Jones stated that 'Fluxus = Maciunas = Fluxus =
Maciunas = Fluxus',25 while Henry Flynt writes that 'Late Fluxus extends through the
Eighties to the present'.26
This proprietary perspective has determined the content of five catalogues, two of which
available to the general public as definitive materials about Fluxus. Four of the Silverman
Collection catalogues are mainly listings of the collection's holdings along with useful
reproductions of the collection's primary materials and Maciunas' publications. Typical of
40 H A N N A H HIGGINS
the process of artistic canonisation, the collection's 'Fluxus'-titled materials narrow with each
new publication, as non-'Fluxus' work is increasingly excluded. A s might be expected, the
production values of each catalogue also increases according to the prestige of the publishing
house or museum.
Thefirstcatalogue, Fluxus Etc., is comparatively open in its inclusion of materials that fall
outside of Hendricks' definition - what he calls 'etc.'28 Cranbrook A c a d e m y in Michigan
produced this catalogue using cheap materials such as newsprint and no-gloss card stock.
The statement on the Cranbrook flier, which accompanied the book and exhibition, notes
that the vitality of Fluxus lay largely outside of Maciunas' domain. The 'etc' in the catalogue
title, therefore, reflects Hendricks' early attempt to include material outside of his o w n strict
29
definition of Fluxus, and to which he attributed m u c h of the group s energy.
Fluxus Etc., Addenda I followed the Cranbrook catalogue. Also printed on newsprint, it
represents a definition of Fluxus that privileges Maciunas materials; roughly 10 percent of
the book consists of a transcript of a deathbed interview between Maciunas and Larry Miller,
and the other 90 percent of the book contains reproductions of newsletters and proposals
almost exclusively by Maciunas. 30
The third publication of the Silverman Collection, Fluxus Etc., Addenda II, appeared
under the auspices of the prestigious Baxter Art Gallery in Pasadena, California. Addenda
II appeared a few months after Addenda I. Its production values are higher still, the print
appearing on a higher grade of paper and with a heavy, glossy stock cover on which appears
Maciunas' 'Purge Manifesto', which was never signed by Fluxus artists. Thisfinaledition of
the Etc. and Addenda catalogues marks the endpoint in the gradual process of equating
Fluxus with Maciunas and packaging Fluxus for the art world in increasingly luxurious
publications and through decreasingly marginal institutions. The glossy red cover of Addenda
II, which is also a reproduction of Maciunas' manifesto, signifies the union of these elements
both conceptually and physically.
Albeit not a catalogue of a particular collection per se, a sixth publication on Fluxus
belongs to the lineage of Silverman catalogues, in part because Hendricks effectively co-
authored it, and in part because it reaffirms his bias within the more general world of
commercial publishers, in this case Thames and Hudson. In the unambiguously titled Fluxus
(published in 1995), roughly two-thirds of the images derive from the Silverman collection
(versus one-third from Archiv S o h m , Staatsgalerie Stuttgart).32 The lead essay, curator
T h o m a s Kellein's T M a k e Jokes! Fluxus Through the Eyes of "Chairman" George
Maciunas', offers the reader quotations that seem to undermine the absolute category of
'chairman', However, the work shown merely reasserts what has clearly become the
dominant framework of Fluxus in English-language publications.
The same development occurs in the publicity for each m u s e u m and thus in the reviews of
each show. Commentators repeatedly bring up the paradox of Maciunas' stated politics
versus the institutionalisation of Fluxus. In 1983 an exhibition flier for the n o w defunct
Neuberger M u s e u m at the State University of N e w York at Purchase presented a version of
Fluxus that mirrored Maciunas' historicist vanguard iconoclasm and politics:
Fluxus was an international art movement founded by George Maciunas in the early
1960s. Inspired by such art movements as futurism and dada, the artists, poets,
musicians and dancers w h o embraced Fluxus were held together by the idea of an art
FLUXUS FORTUNA 41
for every man, a non-academic art, which encompassed satire and humour in order to
poke fun at materialism, 'fine art,' and even itself through a series of exhibitions,
festivals ... etc.33
The New York Times reviewed the show, making the predictable observation of the
paradox of Maciunas' anti-institutional stance (taken as a Fluxus stance) and the work's
institutional viability: 'One of the ironies of our time is that throwaway art becomes
archivable, collectible, pricey (A Fluxus Year B o x 2 ... would n o w fetch $250) and
institutionally embraceable.'34 M o r e importantly, a reviewer of the Pasadena stop of the
same exhibition, taking note of the transformation of Fluxus from (what it is) a chaotic
entity to (what it is not) compatible with the basic tenets of modernist art history, stated
that, 'the practice of art history abhors a messy drawer in the art kitchen ... so the territory
of the utter chaos k n o w n as Fluxus has begun to be straightened out'.
The art-historical project was successful, if a highly legible show in 1988 at the M u s e u m of
Modern Art in N e w York is any indication. The publication produced for that exhibition,
'Fluxus: Selections from the Gilbert and Lila Silverman Collection', contained an essay by the
museums' book curator Clive Phillpot, written in the mid-1980s, 'Fluxus: Magazines,
Manifestos, M u l t u m in Parvo'. The essay defines Fluxus by way of the unsigned manifesto
produced by Maciunas before thefirstFluxus-titled festival in Wiesbaden in 1962. A s with
Addenda II, the 1962 Manifesto is physically and conceptually fused with the n a m e Fluxus, as it
appears on the inside cover of the title page of the catalogue - a symbolic and material fusion
of the single word 'Fluxus' on the title page with the manifesto verso. Phillpot writes: 'The aims
of Fluxus, as set out in the Manifesto of 1963, are extraordinary, but connect with the radical
ideas fermenting at the time.'35
The m o v e m e n t of this version of Fluxus into the mainstream of art-historical
consciousness in the United States, while virtually guaranteed by the M u s e u m of Modern
Art show, m a d e further inroads with thefirstdeluxe coffee-table book of Fluxus, Fluxus
Codex, published by Harry A b r a m s in 1988. The appeal of the show for M o M A appears to
have come in part from the future A b r a m s publication as indicated by a letter from
Hendricks to the museum. 3 6 The affirmative response came from Clive Phillpot, whose
library had exhibition space. The main galleries had been previously slated for exhibitions.
Like the Stockhausen reporters, critics either praised the ensuing exhibit by using a
predictably narrow political framework, or, conversely, criticised the exhibition (correctly)
for lacking vitality, given the same historicist perspective. W h a t matters most is that the
premise of the show was overly narrow and therefore anathema to the vital pluralism of
Fluxus. For example, Catherine Liu's review in Artforum objected to the placement of the
show in the M o M A library: 'The do-it-yourself wackiness of the objects might have been lost
in an over-aestheticised setting, but that is no reason to marginalise the work by stuffing it
into the vestibule of a library.'37
Independent curator and critic Robert M o r g a n described it differently:
One of the delights at seeing this exhibition is that it's in the Library of the M u s e u m of
Modern Art and not in the regular exhibition space. This makes the show somewhat of
an adventure. One gets the opportunity to hunt, to peer around the card catalogues and
to look between the shelved books on reserve. Fluxus emphasised such an approach.38
Morgan explicitly addresses the problem of Maciunas' role as organiser and 'central figure'
42 H A N N A H HIGGINS
in the production of these multiples. The question of other work, therefore, remains open for
discussion, since M o r g a n asserts Maciunas' centrality by comparing him to the central figure
of an earlier movement: 'Through it all it was clear that George Maciunas was the central
figure. His relationship to Fluxus was comparable to Breton's relationship to Surrealism.'
Like the M o M A catalogue and Addenda II, the Codex begins with a fusion of the n a m e
Fluxus and the Maciunas-based paradigm by means of two photos of Maciunas' studio from
1969 on two pages preceding the main title page of the book. The Fluxus Codex, a catalogue
raisonne of Fluxus projects linked to Maciunas either by mention in a letter or in his project
notes, functions as an index of that portion of Fluxus activity, although it contains no
scholarly or interpretive writing per se. The book's objective or scientific quality m a y obscure
the specific nature of its curatorial system.
Bruce Altschuler notes this problem in his critique of the Codex that appeared in Arts
Magazine in 1989. Altschuler's simple misgivings about the book produce a critique not only
of the book but also of the Silverman Collection, which sponsored the book. In the
concluding statements Altschuler notes that
Restricting Fluxus to Maciunas-related material, then, creates an arbitrary division
within the work of many artists. More importantly, to follow Maciunas in taking a
narrow view of Fluxus is to limit our understanding of its significance. For m u c h of the
importance of Fluxus lies in its connections with the art of its time, both as influence
and as concurrent expression.
By the same token, where a community-based and multiple understanding of Fluxus existed
in American institutions, it was systematically obscured. Eric Vos, the organiser of the Jean
Brown Collection of the Getty Centre for the History of Art and the Humanities, radically
restructured the collection to accommodate the Maciunas-based paradigm. This reconfigura-
tion reflects Brown's understanding of Fluxus, though not of her collection. B r o w n recalled
the beginnings of her collection in terms that define Fluxus as Maciunas' project: 'If I was
going to do Fluxus, I would have to have lots of objects, because George m a d e them all.'41
She continues, T wanted the history, the background, very good archival material... I don't
think I was rigid about that at alVA1 Eric Vos, on the other hand, organised Brown's materials
at the Getty, stating:
[T]he previous 'Fluxus Archive,' which appeared to have been organised on the basis of
Jean Brown's originalfiles,also included manyfileslabelled 'Non-Fluxus events' etc.,
containing non-Fluxus work by Fluxus artists.
But, he continues:
[S]ince the demarcation of Fluxus as a group of artists (rather than as a canon of works)
has meanwhile been 'codified,' with Jon Hendricks' Fluxus Codex ... the Fluxus Codex
formed the basis of the organisation of this series.43
T o date, few scholars have used the archive extensively, since the Getty requires notice and
invitations to use the materials. However, the Getty Archive does constitute the second-
largest Fluxus holding in this country, and its restructuring according to the Maciunas-based
paradigm is not without its implications. First, the centralising principle has simplicity, which
we saw in the formation of the Silverman programme. Second, other institutions have
adopted that programme because of its organisational appeal.
FLUXUS FORTUNA 43
The Maciunas-based paradigm also determined the basis of Elizabeth Armstrong's and
Joan Rothfuss' curatorship of 'In the Spirit of Fluxus', which opened at the Walker Art
Centre in Minneapolis in 1992. After Minneapolis, the show followed an extensive itinerary,
including the Whitney M u s e u m of American Art in N e w York, the M u s e u m of
Contemporary Art in Chicago, the Wexner Centre for the Visual Arts in Columbus, Ohio,
the San Francisco M u s e u m of Modern Art, the Santa Monica Museum and the Fundacion
Antoni Tapies in Barcelona. As the most visible and largest exhibition to date in the world,
'In the Spirit of Fluxus' has defined Fluxus for most people for the immediate future.
Based primarily on the Silverman Collection and therefore essentially unable to be critical
of the Collection's curatorial policy, the curators limited the bulk of the show to work
produced during Maciunas' lifetime in general and to the 1960s in particular. This principle
led to significant omissions, particularly of those artists who differed with Maciunas on issues
of policy or practice in the early 1960s. Most notable among these exclusions were Philip
Corner, Dick Higgins, Jackson M a c L o w and Wolf Vostell, to name only a few. Albeit
gesturing toward new work by other Fluxus artists in the form of interactive sound
installations by Yoshi W a d a and Alison Knowles, what there was of recent work was left
floundering in contrast to the simple narrative of the rest of the show.44
Significantly, the Walker symposium, 'Fluxus Publicus', in February 1993, made
noteworthy efforts at broadening this scope. Fluxus scholar Karen Moss, who now works
for the Walker, described the California Fluxus projects; T treated Fluxus variability in N e w
York; Eric Andersen discussed the movement of Fluxus throughout Europe before and after
Maciunas as Intermedia; and Alexandra Munroe examined the nature of Fluxus in Japan. In
this manner, the exhibition organisers made space for opposition within the ranks of their
scholarly format. The dominant narrative reigned, however, in the material document of the
exhibition - its catalogue, In the Spirit of Fluxus. With the exception of Kristine Stiles'
analysis of the event 'Between Water and Stone' (already cited in the introduction to this
article) and Andreas Huyssen's 'Back to the Future: Fluxus in Context', each article in that
volume confirmed a point of view established by the majority of exhibition artefacts.45
In conclusion, the version of Fluxus that dominates in the American context affirms the
mythology of Fluxus as it was perpetuated by Maciunas since the 1960s. The ideological
definition is activist, but narrow politically. In stylistic terms, Fluxus is rather traditionally
iconoclastic, made of ephemeral materials and fragments of existing matter. Finally, Fluxus
functions socially as a benevolent dictatorship ruled singularly by Maciunas and is
supiciously devoid of messy social terms like internal argument, ideological differentiation
and stylistic breadth. What is more, by locating Fluxus almost exclusively in the 1960s, this
dominant model systematically upends any possibility of Fluxus artists surviving economic-
ally as a group, since it makes the viability of current Fluxus work as 'Fluxus' untenable. For
this reason, the Maciunas-based paradigm of Fluxus is both historically inaccurate and
morally indefensible.
Fluxus artists as Fluxus art. While there are important differences between early and recent
Fluxus work, looking at current work by Fluxus artists allows for a highly elastic
representation of the self-construction of Fluxus artists today. For this reason, the last section
of this survey of 'Fluxus Fortuna' is told through the 1992 anniversary exhibitions and
performance festivals of the 1962 concerts in Europe. Significantly, 'In the Spirit of Fluxus' was
included in the remarks on the United States because it belongs essentially to an unproblematic
absorbtion of the Maciunas-based paradigm, whereas the other festivals did not.
In summary, the recent fortunes of Fluxus can be described using the anniversary events
of 1992.46 After a description of three of these ('Fluxattitudes' in N e w York City, 'Fluxus
Virus' in Cologne, and 'Excellent " 9 2 " ' in Wiesbaden-Erbenheim, Germany, and
Copenhagen, Denmark), I will address some current work by Fluxus artists as an aspect
of Fluxus Fortuna. This is, I hope, a manner of approach appropriate to Fluxus Fortuna -
the fortune of Fluxus, or its history - through its contemporary manifestations. That these
works were chosen by Fluxus artists to represent themselves as Fluxus artists mitigates
against the objection that these are not Fluxus works. They certainly are, although there are
works by Fluxus artists that do not necessarily 'belong to' Fluxus. It was because of O w e n
Smith's insight that I have placed these comparative descriptions at the end of the essay - to
end, as it were, at the beginning. Thanks, Owen.
Excellent
Storming the doors of the G o o d Buy Supermarket, mauling the shelves for bargains and
barrelling to the cash registers, the surging throng resembled an open-admission rock concert
more than a market place or an art opening. Neither brand n a m e 'Excellent Festival'
shopping bags and register receipts, nor U P I codes on all the products m a d e this market
super - at least not in their o w n right - rather, the G o o d B u y Supermarket demands
comment because it sold inexpensive and potentially mass-produced art objects by Fluxus
artists, m a n y of w h o m performed using innovative formats in the main space of the Nikolai
Kirke next door.
This was all part of'Excellent "92"', a festival of twelve artists celebrating thirty years of
Fluxus activity. It began at Michael and Uta Berger's Fluxeum (November 22-24), and
travelled to the Nikolai Kirke in Copenhagen, D e n m a r k (November 26, 28 and 29) and the
M a l m o Konsthalle in M a l m o , Sweden (November 27). This international Flux-blitz was
organised by Danish Fluxus artist Eric Andersen and a loyal, longtime supporter and
sometime contributor to Fluxus in Denmark, K n u d Pedersen. Even if twelve artists in three
cities in one week with an Art Supermarket at one location and four performance formats
sounds like an organisational nightmare, it did not show.
The variable aspect of the 'Excellent "92"' festival in place, time and production speaks to
the lack of uniformity, or put positively, the pluralism, of Fluxus, already suggested its social
formation. Furthermore, n e w and old work was incorporated into the festival so that
whatever Fluxus is or was for a given artist could determine that artist's contribution. In the
tradition of Andersen's market of'Anonymous Merchandise' at Arthus, Denmark, in 1971,
Andersen and Pedersen conceived of the G o o d Buy Supermarket as an inexpensive venue for
mass-produced Fluxus multiples, which would in turn further support the handsomely
funded 'Excellent "92"'. With the exception that each multiple could be potentially mass-
FLUXUS FORTUNA 45
produced, their character was completely determined by the individual artist - with no
prerequisite style or content.
Some resembled unique objects by the same artists, others resembled historic multiples, and
many pieces had one element in each place. For the former two possibilities, one might look to
Geoffrey Hendricks, who produced both a sky card multiple and a series of Flux-relics, such as
shrink-wrapped last cigarette butts from important Fluxus situations or last bottles of wine
from others. For thefinalpossibility - of new work that is distinctly continuous with a historic
multiple - one might look to Alison Knowles, who produced Bean Rolls (rolled texts in a
square can full of dried beans) in 1963, and produced, among other things, a very different
bean multiple here - a Pocket Warmer, or thumb-sized bean-bag chair for fingers.
The multiple produced for the G o o d Buy Supermarket named each artist on its label, a
gesture toward the authorial integrity that is intrinsic to Fluxus as a multifaceted whole. This
would not be necessarily worthy of note, except that it has negative implications for at least
one exhibition of Fluxus work in the United States, namely, 'Fluxattitudes' at the N e w
Museum of Contemporary Art in Manhattan (26 September-3 January 1993). At that
exhibition, the artists contributed their words to the project of self-construction.
Fluxattitudes
Sympathy with Maciunas' politics has lead curators and critics to determine the content of
shows from the point of view of political sympathy with the prescriptive, centrist and old-
fashioned leftist rhetoric that is all too often attached to Fluxus as a whole. 'Fluxattitudes'
required that a host of undifferentiated Fluxus and non-Fluxus artists provide work
anonymously and for free and orient it towards the American presidential elections. Thus,
'Fluxattitudes' was determined by a party-political, no-value concept with utter disregard for
the international character of and variability within the group. The results were suggestive in
that they indicate lasting tensions within Fluxus, tensions which have historic counterparts
in, for example, 1962, which O w e n Smith describes in terms of the ambivalent reactions to
the famous Purge Manifesto, as well as in the debate surrounding the Fluxshoe and a number
of other Fluxus events and exhibitions.
Responses to the prescriptive ideological basis of 'Fluxattitudes' created debates along
these lines. Some loved the idea, agreeing with it fully as the basis of Fluxus ideology, while
others rejected it with equal passion. This confusion made 'Fluxattitudes' extremely
interesting from a didactic point of view. W h e n most of the artists responded negatively to
the prescriptive elements of the invitation, its curators, Cornelia Lauf and Susan Hapgood,
included the negative correspondence in the show. Albeit probably accidental and woefully
indicative of America's funding problems and misconceptions about Fluxus, this
correspondence w o n the show an important place in the history of Fluxus exhibitions. It
is to the curators' credit that this debate took a public form. The correspondence shows how
varied Fluxus is internally, and how the ideologically narrow view of Fluxus has
overdetermined its reception in the United States.
Fluxus Virus
The problem of scale lay at the root of Galerie Schuppenhauer's 'Fluxus Virus', Cologne (1-27
September 1992), where forty-one Fluxus artists and twenty-one intermedia artists were
46 H A N N A H HIGGINS
represented by historic and new work. The historic objects section, curated by the Gallery's
owner, Chrystal Schiippenhauer, was basically a show of early work by each of the Fluxus
artists shown elsewhere in 'Fluxus Virus'. This small exhibition, unpretentious in its purpose,
held m a n y wonderful, early Fluxus works, although one piece by Geoffrey Hendricks was
misidentified as K e n Friedman's, and some of the more fragile work seemed to suffer from
exposure to the wind and rain that blustered through the austere, semi-exposed exhibition space.
M o r e problematic, however, were the new works, which were commissioned for the show
in the space contributed by the Kaufhof Parkhaus, a parking garage. In keeping with the
nature of the site, the artists were invited to produce an automobile, so that, as at
'Fluxattitudes', the prescriptive curatorial concept overrode the various means and methods
of each artist. The most successful installations were built by artists w h o rejected the car
concept but built an installation anyway. Takako Saito, for instance, ran a book-making
stand replete with carnivalesque canopies and thefinepaper work typical of her production.
Milan Knizak produced a three-metre cube covered with square-cut records, and Dick
Higgins produced an ink-splattered dinosaur of wooden chairs in a blacklight darkroom.
However, the cars were the centrepiece of the exhibition and were produced too quickly
and with faulty materials - the artists had almost no assistance or access to materials until
just before the opening. The most notable exception to this was Ben Patterson's duck car, a
green Citroen that was turned on a welded spit while real ducks roasted on afirebelow it.
This aside, several wonderful ideas were so poorly executed that they broke during or soon
after the opening. This was the fate of Joe Jones' orchestral car of instruments (activated by
turning on the lights, wipers, ignition and so on) and Eric Andersen's skateboard car,
designed to spin on four skateboards placed perpendicular to each other under the wheels of
the car.
Wolf Vostell, the most car-oriented Fluxus artist of all, was excluded for political reasons
- city officials felt he had been overexposed in two recent, major exhibitions in Cologne. This
exclusion rendered the exhibition m u c h less useful historically. A s an independent curator of
photographs for catalogue and exhibition, I m a d e efforts to correct this inaccuracy in a time-
line of performance photographs since 1955 and portraits, which was exhibited at the Kolner
Kunstverein (1-20 September). O n one wall, photographs were placed sequentially by year
and above each other, according to h o w m u c h activity occurred in that year - creating a
sequence of broad or narrow bands of relative activity along the time-line. O n the facing wall,
single portraits of Fluxus artists making work or performing, most of them by the Frankfurt
photographer Wolfgang Trager, were hung in an ellipse, whose curving form contrasted with
the historic development of the group on the opposite wall.
and taking their orders. 7 The visitors sat at small tables, where a m e n u listed various old and
new pieces by present and absent Fluxus artists alike.
The toylike, mechanical music of rotary-motorised rubber bands on violins, super balls on
tom-toms and bouncing-ball drumbeats in the choir loft of Berger's church m u s e u m
announced that someone had 'ordered' Joe Jones' big band of self-propelled musical
instruments. Meanwhile, Dick Higgins on a ladder pouring water into a basin meant that
someone else had ordered George Brecht's Drip Music. T w o live hens were released into
another part of the room - Ben Vautier's Hens, and Alison Knowles performed a new work
that involved shaking a metal tray full of beans and toys around the room. Most striking of
all, perhaps, in the context of this apparent chaos, were tables of people listening to hand-
held tape recorders carrying out instructions to (among other things) 'Suck on your finger',
'Stick your finger in your ear', 'Lift your chair over your head' or 'Stand on your chair' -
requests given in the privacy of a headset by the Dutch artist Willem de Ridder.
W h a t seemed a general chaos atfirstis specifically audience-driven, and without chaos - for
each audience member controlled their order and had direct contact with each artist. This
allowed for multiple frameworks regarding Fluxus to coexist. Those artists w h o base Fluxus in
the past performed historic works and others n e w ones. This was the most successful
performance format at the 'Excellent' festival because, like the multiples produced for its G o o d
Buy Supermarket, this format most emphasised the coexistence of various points of view.
All three evenings at Wiesbaden followed this format, while in Copenhagen, the a la carte
approach was used only once. The other Nikolai Kirke evenings consisted of two other
formats: 'Hire an Artist', whereby the audience could hire an artist by the minute or hour to
perform with or for them, and a marathon twelve-hour event consisting largely of duration
pieces - where a single note might be played on the organ for an hour (Philip Corner), or
every single note played cumulatively with each other (Eric Andersen). In the first, the
audience was not sufficiently acquainted with each artist to m a k e confident choices, so m a n y
of them wandered to the work stations looking for artists to hire. This aimless quality also
characterised the marathon, except that on this occasion it functioned positively as people
felt free to come and go as they got tired and to return whenever they wished. Especially
successful on this day was Ben Vautier's piece. Sitting on top of a pillar high above the
audience, he spent the afternoon writing and changing cardboard signs in front of him on an
easel. These read, a m o n g other things, 'Look at me', 'Don't look at me', Forget me', and
'Sometimes I think Fluxus is boring'.
Like D a Capo, the 'Excellent' festival, the a la carte process, and G o o d B u y
Supermarket, opened a w a y for various ideas of Fluxus to coexist within the space of
one context. Here it was permitted to be past for some and present for others, interactive
with the audience and its o w n entity as well, inexpensive but with sufficient backing to
generate an honorarium for each artist, and distinctly international in character. Yet it had
the sociological cohesion of each artist determining their o w n work and interacting with the
other artists, performing in each others' pieces and talking about them. This expansive yet
comprehensible, varied yet integrated impression seems to be at the heart of Fluxus as a
whole. It is an impression that - though sometimes more successful than others - is almost
entirely limited to European exhibitions and collections.
W h y Europe? Perhaps because there countries are forced to interact with each other and
48 H A N N A H HIGGINS
the myth of the individual of genius is more easily tempered - or perhaps the opposite is true;
that the American taste for individual genius leads us to look for a single leader and a single
reason for things being as they are. Perhaps, too, it has something to do with the G e r m a n
need to re-create the avant-garde in the wake of its destruction by the Nazis, and a tradition
of group action within that context.48 At the same time, pluralism and group identity might
also be convenient art-critical foils for ideologically evacuated formalism and the heroic
1950s. These possible explanations for w h y one version of a story is told at one site while
another dominates elsewhere indicates that the study of reception tells as m u c h about the
subject as it does about the object of inquiry.
It is at this point that what is at stake in a given version of Fluxus becomes painfully clear.
W h a t makes an exhibition excellent? It might include the strongest aspect of each exhibition
of 1992. It would include acknowledging the internal variations and conflicts within Fluxus
artists' ideologies - like 'Fluxattitudes'; at the same time as it would deal across concepts in
the spirit of the 'Excellent' festival and the G o o d B u y Supermarket. It is, after all, the
enduring, dynamic character of Fluxus that speaks to diversity and community at once, that
belongs to various formations, and thus functions as a site of education about art and the
world and - where possible - yourself. In the pages of this volume you m a y find a Fluxus that
is truly 'excellent'.
W h a t you will certainly not find is extensive critical writing on very recent work by Fluxus
artists, because this work has been largely ignored by the art-writing establishment. This is not
the fault of the editor at all, since almost no coverage of this work exists and cannot therefore
be placed meaningfully in an anthology. That is not to say that there is not coverage of new
work by Fluxus artists, but it does suggest that these individual works are seldom viewed
through a lens of Fluxus concerns. It m a y initially seem like a digression, but these current
works cast light and shadows on past work in interesting ways. I have sketched only a few of
these out for you in the space of these very few pages. There remains m u c h work to be done.
of arbitrariness. With the exception of a small, privately owned Fluxus M u s e u m , called the
Fluxeum and run by Michael and Uta Berger, Wiesbaden is more a run-down bathing resort
than a Mecca of contemporary art. Nevertheless, Block's festivals and catalogues have done
m u c h to keep Fluxus vital by providing much-needed material and moral support.
Unlike m a n y English-language catalogues and exhibitions that close Fluxus off at 1978,
when Maciunas died, the catalogue titles of Block's festivals are temporally vast and
therefore auspicious: 1962 Wiesbaden FLUXUS 1982, and Fluxus Da Capo: 1962 Wiesbaden
1992. For m y purposes, it is significant that in both cases the responsibility for defining
Fluxus lay with the artist. The artists chose recent work themselves, thus making each choice
significant in terms of each artist's self-construction as a contemporary Fluxus artist. In the
1992 catalogue, this effort was expanded to include artists' favourite texts about their work,
which resulted in autobiography and self-criticism, as well as biography, criticism and
philosophy by others. In a rather arbitrary attempt to expand the number of artists beyond
those present at thefirstWiesbaden Fluxus festival, Block included an additional artist from
each of the cardinal points (north, south, east and west) as well as 'one surprise'.
Listed on the poster, designed by Fluxus artist Benjamin Patterson as a 'Shopping List',
are artists w h o were present at the 1962 festival, including Dick Higgins, Alison Knowles,
N a m June Paik, Ben Patterson and Emmett Williams. The historic dimension was introduced
with the invitation of John Cage, w h o unfortunately died shortly before the opening.
Henning Christiansen, a sometime Fluxus adherent from Denmark, represented the north;
Joe Jones, an American expatriate Fluxus artist w h o spent m u c h of his life in Italy,
represented the south; Milan Knizak, a Czechoslovakian artist with long-standing ties to
Fluxus, represented the east; and Geoffrey Hendricks, a Fluxus artist from N e w York City,
represented the west. Notably, the historic premise combined with these rather arbitrary
additions meant that some consistently active members of the Fluxus community could not
be included. Absent were Eric Andersen (Denmark), Philip Corner (America), Takako Saito
and Mieko Shiomi (Japan), and Ben Vautier (France), not to mention a long list of sometime
cohorts - Jean D u p u y (France), K e n Friedman (Norway), Willem de Ridder (Holland) and
Bengt A f Klintberg (Sweden). Artists long out of touch with Fluxus for various reasons were
also essentially absent. These include George Brecht, Y o k o O n o , Arthur Koepcke, Robert
Filliou and Robert Watts - the latter three deceased. The 1982 Wiesbaden festival included
many of these and more, but offered less exposure to each artist. Exclusions and numeric
limitations notwithstanding, Block's decision to limit the number of artists in 1992, while
alternately historic (the original artists) and arbitrary (the cardinal directions), did provide
for a rare opportunity to see some scope in each individual's work.
The choice of additional artists also provides for interesting examples of the type of issue
inherent in the long-term practices of a group of artists. Certainly Fluxus artists can and do
make work that they d o not consider Fluxus-related. Significantly, m a n y artists long
associated with each other in N e w York or elsewhere, simply did not m a k e the fateful trip to
Wiesbaden in 1962. This would include Joe Jones, the representative from the south, and
probably the least contestable direction-based participant. The case for inclusion of Knizak is
more complex. H e was in close contact with some artists and not others - a fact that extends
the scope of community beyond the network of regular and extensive group contact.
Similarly, as a Czech artist he was often held to constraints of censorship, which meant that
50 H A N N A H HIGGINS
m u c h of his contribution to Fluxus was confined to what he could send by mail, in particular
a magazine called Aktual. His recent work reflects these difficulties. Thus it requires some
analysis as Fluxus, but also as eastern bloc, work. Third, Block's addition of Geoffrey
Hendricks recognises the issue of serial generations of Fluxus artists. Unlike the other
direction-based additions, he was not yet closely associated with the group in 1962 and did
not begin a regular and intensive association until later. However, he has been a vital and
active associate since that time. His inclusion implies difficulties in too strictly associating
Fluxus participation with a particular m o m e n t in time. Similarly, Hendricks is a painter of
sky images, which, though painted on a variety of surfaces that range from objects to
canvases, complicate the habitual association of Fluxus with iconoclastic, fragmented or
ephemeral practices.
During the historic tour of 1962 Joe Jones remained in his native city of N e w York, house-
sitting for Alison Knowles and Dick Higgins in their loft on Canal Street. While there he
produced hisfirstself-playing instruments. These consist largely of stringed instruments but
have also included pianos, drums and wind instruments. They have changed very little over the
years. The most dramatic change came with the introduction of solar power. Jones used solar
cells to rig up the instruments to the environment itself. The machines work like this. A small
rotary motor is attached, usually by a wire, so that it hangs in close proximity to the
instrument's primary sounding area - for example, over the strings in the middle of the body of
a violin, guitar or harp, or just above the skin of a drum head. Attached to the rotary motor, a
sounding device, such as rubber bands or balls, spins across the sounding surface of an
instrument. In an example in the Wiesbaden Fluxeum, a small guitar is played by a rotary
motor equipped with rubber bands. The sound, a tinkle punctuated by whispering caresses and
the occasional thwack, communicates an expanse of musical experiences that range from the
lyrical to the startling. A t the 1992 festival in Wiesbaden, Jones conducted a solar-powered
concert of these instruments at a magnitude far exceeding the assembled sculptural 'orchestra'
shown here. At this greater scale, what was lyrical in one instrument became a complex w e b of
sound in many, and what was merely startling in a single instrument became sublime.
A constellation of critical issues lies at the core of Jones' instruments. Uppermost among
them is the concept of musical genius in orchestral performance. That machines can generate
significant sound places the culture of virtuoso performance in doubt. There is a history of
such associations. Luigi Russolo was a Futurist composer w h o built noise instruments in
1913, called Tntonouori', that ground, sputtered and screeched in imitation of the sounds of
the modern city. These Intonouori clearly differ from Jones' instruments insofar as Jones'
mechanical sounds are not imitative per se. Both Jones' and Russolo's work, however,
threatens the culture of musical virtuosity and offers a viable alternative.
The same might be said of the contribution to Wiesbaden in 1992 offered by Dick Higgins.
His Gateway (for Pierre Mer cure), 1992 consisted of a hallwayfilledwith large and small
metallic refuse objects (rusty car parts, springs, coils, fan blades, and so on) that would sound
against each other when disturbed by the passage of a visitor. By way of contact microphones
placed on the objects, the sounds were 'amplified and broadcast, rather loud, through two
loudspeakers',50 At the crowded opening, the metal objects sounded alternately like massive
gongs and car accidents, brushing rusty metal and deadened thuds into the walls of the
hallway. Distinctly industrial sounding, this massive sounding-box c u m hallway more closely
FLUXUS FORTUNA 51
recalls the effect of Russolo's machines, albeit minus the imitative or representational feature
of the Futurist experiment. Significantly, the Gateway requires visitors. In a rare glimpse of
the relationship between bodies and machines, alone and in crowds, the visitor/performer m a y
be m a d e critically aware of this art experience as of a piece with life experience.
Higgins has written several theoretical and philosophical essays about Fluxus, as well as
producing his o w n visual and sound poetry. H e is also a performance artist, painter and
composer. It is significant that he chose this sculpture for the Wiesbaden show. It relates to
other works, particularly performance and composition. Higgins is perhaps best k n o w n for
his 'Danger Music' performance scores and his 'Thousand Symphonies' musical composi-
tions. These symphonies originate in music paper being shot through with a machine-gun and
then spray painted. The resulting score (not shown) occurs when the spray paint passes
through the machine-gunned paper and on to another sheet of music paper. The violence of
the symphonic score is palpable in the shreds of ballistic evidence that in turn evoke
instrumental music. G o n e is the composer's will in calibrating the effect of each note as it is
handwritten. Instead, the composer's will as direct gesture, simultaneously of destruction and
creation, creates a visceral image for the viewer and listener. A similarly direct encounter, this
time between the performer and the 'instrumentalist' can be felt in Higgins' Danger Music #2,
which was performed in Wiesbaden in 1962. In that piece, the artist had his head shaved by
his wife, the Fluxus artist Alison Knowles.
O n the other side of the Gateway, the visitor encountered an installation by Geoffrey
Hendricks entitled For Wiesbaden Fluxus, 1992. There was the extreme contrast between the
flailing junk instruments and a room full of representational images of skies in various
degrees of sunshine, cloudiness, darkness and moonlight. H u n g from ladders, the sky
paintings seemed all the more real vis-a-vis their proximity to earth strewn across the floor
and a pile of stones. Representation has, as it were, come h o m e to roost in Fluxus. Like
Higgins, Hendricks has a long-term interest in direct encounters between the body and its
environment, for example his Body/Hair, May 15, 1971, in which the artist shaved his body.
However, in the case of installations like this, Hendricks has chosen the path of
representation to state his cause.
The watercolour paintings moved with the gentle breezes they encountered in the
exhibition space. They are, moreover, exquisitely and traditionally painted. Each sky testifies
to the artist's great skill at capturing fleeting moments in the ever-transforming landscapes of
the sky. Hendricks clearly belongs to an esteemed canon of landscape painters that would
have to include Joseph Cozens and Joseph Mallord William Turner - two historical figures
w h o excelled in capturing these fleeting effects.
This fleeting subject matter and the installation of the images as appendages of
construction elements, a ladder, and earth elements, soil and stone, reference the
ephemerality and environmental contingencies that belong to the works discussed thus far
by Jones and Higgins. But what are w e to m a k e of their insistent representational character?
W h a t place might this historic reference have within Fluxus? Critics repeatedly consign the
avant-garde to a site of critical practice within traditional culture - what the author T h o m a s
C r o w calls the 'research and development wing of the culture industry'.51 According to this
line of argument, avant-garde work fails as it approaches official culture, and, where it
succeeds at all, it does so because of its unilateral critique of the industry - this despite
52 H A N N A H HIGGINS
Crow's description of said critique as always cooped by an official culture industry. Avant-
garde artists are, then, at best naive for thinking they might effect culture or at worst
counterfeit in their anti-institutional pose. Within this context of valuation, Hendricks' work
offers food for thought. His sky paintings and the objects that surround them testify to the
recuperation of a variety of practices within an avant-garde thematic. The uniform rejection
of culture traditionally associated with the historic avant-garde has been given over to a
nuanced and complex system of affirmation (the paintings) and rejection (the ready-mades
that display them). Thus, Fluxus cannot be defined as an avant-garde in Burger's
institutional sense, nor as a strictly neo-avant-garde in the pejorative sense of the term,
The visitor struggles in vain to locate these paintings in a closed, stylistic category of
iconoclasty or anti-virtuosity.
Another explanation for the strange power of these paintings might be their placement
relative to a typology of Fluxus. Toward this end, I turn to the Hegelian frame of argument,
a thesis is made, then an antithesis, and, finally, a synthesis of both positions. A s the complex
structure of Fluxus history indicates, these phases need not be in sequential relationship to
each other, but rather might coexist as structural elements in the argumentative character
that is Fluxus. Thus, despite variety in early Fluxus performance and production, one can
still speak of a family of practices - performative, multiple and often ephemeral - that
characterise m u c h early Fluxus work - a thesis in short. O w e n Smith's piece characterised
this as the 'useful' performance and publications basis of early Fluxus work. The antithesis of
this performance and publications (or multiple) basis would lie in the push for variety of
performance techniques and unique object production that is immediately contingent on the
earliest expressions of Fluxus, such as Ay-O's rainbow paintings, for example. These would
reflect the movement towards unique objects and group definition that lies behind the
rejection of the Fluxshoe and which typifies FluXus in the 1970s in Anderson's piece - though
the relationship is not chronological as the dates of m y examples might suggest.
Hendricks' sky works, then, would constitute the resolution or synthesis of these
possibilities. The ladders, stones and earth are found objects in the tradition of Duchamp's
ready-mades, while the sky images bespeak a painterly tradition, albeit a tradition of
representing the fleeting effects of the weather. W h a t is more, historically Hendricks has
covered m a n y objects, including his o w n body, with sky paintings. Thus these paintings are
literally (the ladders) and figuratively (as image supports) constituted by the ready-made
tradition. In what amounts to a conflation of the ready-made and painterly traditions of
the twentieth century, Hendricks' paintings seem to imply that all modes can be
appropriated to a traditional art-object status. These works imply that in an art context
it m a y well be that all objects are representational insofar as they represent a reality outside
of the art context.
Milan Knizak's contribution to the D a Capo 'New Paradise' consisted of a display of
gilded, composite creatures and silver-toned futuristic airplanes on a mirrored platform.
Composite creatures included a snake with a lion's head, a shark with an elephant's head, a
duck with a bulldog's head, and a dragon's body with kangaroo feet and a goat's head. The
airplanes look like composites of fighter jets and heavy-metal guitars. Like the composite
creatures that people the margins of medieval manuscripts, these beings bring together two
mutually exclusive objects. In bringing these elements together, Knizak engages in an
FLUXUS FORTUNA 53
alchemical marriage of opposites. Inverted in the mirror base, the possibilities for organic
reconfigurations seem limitless.
Particularly with regard to the problems of the organic h u m a n body in an artificial or
urban environment, these creatures evoke familiar Fluxus territory. A n d yet their insistent
representational character and the gaudy use of gold and silver and the hyper-static plane of
mirror, place Knizak's works here in a materialistic aesthetic quite alien to m a n y of his
Fluxus comrades. It is significant that he comes from Czechoslovakia. This reconciliation of
opposites m a y speak to a grotesque reconciliation of eastern and western cultures, of a
grossly material capitalism on one hand, and a grotesque of oppression on the other. W h a t is
more, to represent the world of myth, of fantasy, and of conglomerate creatures as 'real' -
insofar as they inhabit real space as sculptural miniatures - has implications for the persistent
socialist realism that dominated the official art scene behind the Iron Curtain for m u c h of the
twentieth century.
While Knizak was particularly vulnerable to the oppressive cultural policies engendered
by officials in his homeland, between 1963 and 1968 he was engaged in street performance in
Prague and Marienbad, which included a Prague Fluxus in 1966 and most of which took
place under the coordinated organisational auspices of his group Aktual (founded in 1964
with Jan M a c h , Vit M a c h , Sinoa Svecova, Jan Trtilek and Robert Whitman). Hand-
produced newspapers, objects and posters accompanied these activities, and it is largely
through these publications that Knizak participated in the extended community of Fluxus
artists. Despite threats to his security, Knizak travelled frequently to the West, beginning in
1968, when he went to the U S A at George Maciunas' invitation. A m o n g other things,
Knizak w o n a D A A D award for residence in Berlin, and, like m a n y Fluxus artists, was
supported in the receipt of that award by the programme director Rene Block. Since 1990
Knizak has been Director of the A c a d e m y of Visual Arts in Prague.
In his recent institutional affiliation, his threatened past as a clandestine artist in a
totalitarian context and his movement back and forth between the two sides of the cold-war
border, Knizak literally embodies the possibilities and problems of eastern-bloc artists in a
Western context. T h e transition is uneasy. H o w is Knizak's new-found power and
recognition emblematic of a transformed dominant political ideology? Is there an inherent
problem of official recognition of previously 'outsider' artists as an affirmation of political
and aesthetic orientations commonly associated with the West throughout the cold war? Is
this w h y he chose to produce these disturbing, even tacky, figurines that look like so m u c h
department-store kitsch in the West?
Fortunately, the audience cannot resolve these dilemmas so easily. Kitschy as the figurines
are in material and presentation, they represent disparate animal creatures fused into single,
grotesque bodies. In studying the creatures on a mirror, one is invited to look at their
undersides, at the range of distortions in thefigurethat result in our looking closely at them.
W h a t is the old adage about an unexamined life? Research and examination m a k e it worth
living, and, at least in the context from which Knizak evolved, these practices could threaten
life itself.
A n d yet, in our context - more specifically in mine as an American - these objects lose
their critical edge. They seem to conform to a long trajectory of representational and freakish
objects that merely affirm the commodity status of art, or even worse, fetishise the estranged
54 H A N N A H HIGGINS
object itself. That m a y be w h y these figurines seemed so strange in the context of D a Capo,
though they no doubt had as m u c h right to stake a claim as Fluxus as anything else there.
Moreover, the reconciliation of opposites characteristic of these figurines reverberates with
the restructuring devices inherent in some of the poems of E m m e t t Williams.
In Four Directional Song of Doubt - 'a concrete poem, a song, an instrumental quintet,
instructions for dancers and a picture' by Emmett Williams, performed at the Wiesbaden
Fluxus in 1962 - a chorus offivereaders read from cards at different orientations words from
the statement 'You just never quite know', 52 The cards are divided into one-hundred square
grids which are then marked with ten signal dots (each of which replaces a word) placed in
linear progression. A metronome ticks for one-hundred ticks, and the words are either
spoken or substituted with sounds or gestures. The doubt, a double entendre, lies in the
negative statement about cognition (to doubt) as well as in the chance performance of the
text itself. The fragmentation of the phrase, a linguistic unit, has an august history in the
D a d a Cabaret poems of Tristan Tzara, where words were pulled from a hat and spoken at
random. However, in Williams' case, the deconstruction of the phrase is matched by a careful
reconstruction along spatial lines, through the introduction of the hundred-square grid and
mathematical progression. Thus Williams differs from the poets of the historical avant-garde
in his introduction of an alternative structure to the text.
A similar sense of order within disorder (or the opposite) inflected Williams' contribution
to D a Capo. His Twelve Portraits, 1992 portray artist colleagues (significantly, there are no
w o m e n ) , through objects loosely associated with their lives and practice. Again, the issue of a
representational practice with an avant-garde thematic becomes significant. For instance, the
portrait of George Maciunas, w h o m Williams identifies as the leader of Fluxus, signifies
Maciunas by way of a set of blocks that spell out Fluxus, an anti-tobacco sign (Maciunas was
allergic to smoke), a gilded piece of shit (Maciunas collected excrement and used scatological
imagery in m u c h of his work), and a face wearing an eyepatch (Maciunas lost his right eye in
a brawl with some mafiosi), a m o n g other things.
The surface to which the materials are attached has been carefully measured, and the
objects attached at seemingly random coordinates over that surface. Because of the generous
spacing of the objects, there is a palpable sense of order, either numerical or determined by
aesthetic considerations, underlying these seemingly randomly placed objects. Thus the
portrait objects, contrary to the institutional prerogatives of Duchamp's ready-mades, this
time serve the cause of representation both because of their presentation on a smooth,
painterly ground and by virtue of their 'representing' a personality. In this transformation,
then, Williams' portraits belong both at the end and beginning of twentieth-century art.
Perhaps this is the essence of Maciunas' admonition that Fluxus belongs to the rear-garde:
these portraits appear to invoke an avant-garde thematic, yet they also resist the linearity
inherent in the furthering of the avant-garde role. What, after all, could be more backward
looking than a formal portrait, more historically avant-garde than a ready-made, or more
confusing than a resolution of these traditionally oppositional categories? W h a t is more,
Francis Picabia was already doing this in the 1910s, albeit strictly through line drawings of
ready-mades as portraits, rather than through assemblages of ready-made objects.
A n d yet there is something quite disturbing about the series as a whole. They were
produced for a gallery - Carl Solway in Cincinnati, Ohio - which means they were produced
FLUXUS FORTUNA 55
specifically for a commercially defined audience of high-end art multiples. Moreover, they
were produced within the context of Solway's 'Kunstfabrik'.53 There are twelve portraits.
These are of Joseph Beuys, Marcel D u c h a m p , Richard Hamilton, Jasper Johns, Allan
Kaprow, George Maciunas, Claes Oldenburg, N a m June Paik, Robert Rauschenberg, Daniel
Spoerri and Jean Tinguely. W h a t do these artists have in c o m m o n ? For one thing, T k n o w
them all personally', writes Williams.54 For another, these are all famous male artists, and, as
such, have already received extensive institutional sanction. Thus, while the argument might
be m a d e that these objects parody the fame game of the art system itself, the slick
presentation of the portraits makes them eager participants more than hucksters in the art
game. A s O w e n Smith pointed out to m e , this Williams piece bears comparison to a situation
parodied by George Maciunas in his 12 Big Names, an advertised concert in which the names
of famous artists were projected in large format on a movie screen.55 If the audience came to
see twelve big names in one evening, they were gravely disappointed!
There is a connection with early work by Williams himself. His Alphabet Symphony was
performed soon after the original Wiesbaden festival, and consisted of activities using objects
as letters. Williams describes one performance:
This is a symphony where you can spell 'love' by smoking a cigar, blowing a silent dog
whistle, eating a chocolate eclair off the floor on all fours doggy-fashion, and tooting a
little ditty on the flute. That's the way it was spelled during thefirstperformance in
London in 1962.56
The Alphabet Symphony resulted in a highly provocative and often-exhibited portrait series
(by Williams' friend Barney Kirchhoff) of Williams performing the symphony. 57 A n d yet the
slick manufacture and choice of famous personages suggests a vast expanse of distance
between the Twelve Portraits and the simple, alphabet and language pieces typical of
Williams' earlier work. Thus, there is something strangely academic, official, sanctioned and
empty about these portraits. W e are looking at late-twentieth-century academic portraits that
use the accepted terms of our present academies - rupture, found object, chance operation
and institutional self-consciousness.
T o deny the desire for success in the art world and the compromising potential of artists is
naive at best and dehumanising (for the artist) at worst. There is a part of Fluxus that has
always received some kind of official sanction, even as an officially unofficial art. Never forget
that the veryfirstFluxus-titled concert in Germany took place in a m u s e u m in Wiesbaden!
Thus, depressing as I personally find these images, they mark a part of Fluxus history that is
intrinsic to understanding the group in its complex affirmations and criticisms of the art world.
Also addressing a relationship between found objects and the practice of representation,
or, more precisely, between presentation and representation, Alison Knowles introduced
the print series 'Bread and Water, 1992' and an Indian Moon, a white circle filled with
found objects tagged for sounding as instruments at D a Capo. It takes Knowles months to
locate the m o o n objects on the street. They must have certain sounding or visual qualities.
They must also be clean of organic materials. In short, they are not garbage recycled for use
in the gallery - at least not in the sense often inferred where the thing was once part of a
heap of debris. Rather, the objects have a definitive quality of specificity of purpose, which
suggests a connection to another person in another time. Knowles' task is to find those
physical traces of someone else's experience and to relocate them to the art context.
56 H A N N A H H I G G I N S
The audience then approaches the moon, a circle of white on a floor, sits at the edge, and
sounds the objects. By reaching for an object, they too become part of the sequence of objects
found, but not lost, from the momentarily intersecting links with an unknown life. In order to
sound the object, the reader or performer reads a ticket, a ticket that makes oblique reference
to a page in a book. The imposition of a strict substructural order, as in the grid of the
Williams portraits, has been given over to the patterns of use in One Big Sunday Moon.
Similarly, in the print series, the artist has printed from bread bottoms and overdrawn maps by
hand that place the relationship between use of a thing and its epistemology in high relief. As
Robert C Morgan notes, Knowles' work sets up an archaeology of epistemological elements
wherein 'real knowledge comes from a specific examination of the things laying nearby'.58
These prints display the bottoms of bread loaves and note their approximate parallels
with the geographic sites of rivers. Thus the bread becomes the earth, and the water, the
rivers of the earth itself. Viewed in relation to the intimate relationship set up between bodies
and objects in the m o o n piece, the 'Bread and Water' images reform the body along the lines
both of microcosm (who eats the bread) and of macrocosm (the bread as body, as earth).
Thus the body becomes highly ambiguous in these prints. It is stretched between the most
and least intimate scales it can be.
This problematic of physical engagement with the objects and the idea of manipulated
scales has a long history in Knowles' work. A n early example of the physical interaction with
elements of a deconstructed sculptural object is Knowles'firstbook object, the Bean Rolls
(1961). This book consisted of a cigar tin within which there were texts that could be pulled
out, unrolled and read in any order. Like the objects of the Indian Moon that fall into a
sequence and placement determined by the use of a visitor, the page order of the Bean Rolls is
determined by the reader. The scrolls contain information about beans such as bean
proverbs, recipes and names. A reader might sit on the floor and unscroll them all,
surrounding herself with page strips. Texts tangle physically in what seems to be a chorus of
variable literary snips, their physical order traceable only to their use by the viewer. Like the
bread of the 'Bread and Water' series, beans are a subsistence food, nutritious and
inexpensive. Information, then, in the context of the 'Bread and Water' and Bean Rolls
pieces, serves the health of the body - and the mind
Ben Patterson's poster for D a Capo, 'Zufallig nicht im Museum', parodies the standards
of healthy living and lifestyles that a work like Knowles' implies are overly standardised.
Parodies of the standardisation and institutionalisation of human experiences, as expressed
through a consciously obsessive measurement of bodies and their functions, their con-
sumption and excreta have a long-term presence in the work of many Fluxus artists. Of
course, no two bodies are the same and the clinical apparatus is exposed as somehow absurd.
At the famous Fluxclinics of 1966 and 1977, thefirstset up by Hi Red Centre at the Waldorf
Astoria in N e w York and the second, a mobile clinic set up by Maciunas and located in a
truck in Seattle and its surrounds, the idea of measuring 'each visitor's height, weight, volume
(in bathtub), also volume of mouth, head etc ... strength of fingers ... ability to stand still,
etc etc' was expressed in clinical detail. The description here comes from a letter from George
Maciunas to Milan Knizak, where, Maciunas continues, 'Then a Fluxpassport will be issued
with all this data noted down .. .'59
With Knizak present, what may have been coincidence became an irony of circumstances
FLUXUS FORTUNA 57
when Ben Patterson set up a similar clinic called 'The Clinic of Dr. Ben (BM, M S ) ' at D a
Capo. The parody of measurement, with no apparent applicability except as information for
its own sake, would surely not have been lost on the citizen of what was once called
Czechoslovakia. The eastern bloc countries were famous for their bureaucracies.
Other Fluxus artists have sustained a long-term interest in the clinical and medical
reference in Fluxus. O f particular note is the work of Larry Miller. For example, Miller has
consistently produced 'Orifice Flux Plugs', collected assortments of orifice plugs for the
human body that range from ear plugs and wax to cotton balls, condoms and bullets, since
1974. These resemble many of Maciunas' 'Fluxkits'. However, the clinical dimension has
evolved with new technologies in Miller's work. In Cologne in 1992, Miller could be found
copyrighting the genetic code of his friends, comrades, fellow artists, and audience members.
Miller's genetic-code copyrights from that year in Cologne were based on his knowledge that
such codes could be copyrighted before they were known, and that they could be owned and
protected before the technology of cloning had even been developed.
N o w ,fiveyears later, a sheep has been cloned in Scotland Admittedly, there is scientific
value in reproducing animals that are genetically identical to limit animal testing for random
samples. Yet there is a certain anxiety relieved by Miller's contract and simultaneously
invoked by it. The technological and sociological circumstances provoked by this particular
Fluxcontract are distinctly of this moment, though in the not too distant past they seemed
more the world of sciencefiction(or science friction?), of a distant future or paranoid
present. The genetic Copyrights become a remarkably elastic document in space and time.
They evoke a clinicism in Fluxus that is at once earnest and humourous. Copyrighted, we
become as documents ourselves - measured, contained and ordered in place and time, yet
moving beyond the present moment.
Clearly, this is not a group of 'artists' (there are those w h o would contest the term still!)
that can be categorised, packaged according to some stylistic or ideological principle, and
neatly placed on the shelf of a library. As long as the nature and history of Fluxus remain
debatable, contested and unstable, the spirit of flux in Fluxus remains alive. This is true even
when the debate takes place in academic venues, as it does here. There will, however, pp
doubt come a time when some well-meaning, academic type will come along and can Fluxus.
In being canned, it will be preserved for all time but will lose much of its flavour. It may be
that this process is inevitable if anything of Fluxus is to survive the lives of the artists. The
canning process is, however, unnecessary as long as the artists and those w h o know and love
them are alive. This does not mean that rigorous histories of this or that Fluxus cannot be
written. It merely means the history of all of Fluxus cannot be. Readers like this one are a
good place to begin thinking about the histories of Fluxus, since they give substance to a
variety Of perspectives.
W h e n George Maciunas was very poor he bought cans of food from the grocery store
that had lost their labels. They were, understandably, sold at a considerable discount.
There was certain adventure to be had in taking meals with him during that period. Dinner
might be string beans, chicken soup or corned-beef hash. The adventure lay in opening the
can to see what was inside. Ben Vautier had these cans relabelled as 'Flux Mystery Food'.
If Fluxus is to be canned, at least for the moment, let it be canned in such a way as to leave
the labels well enough alone and to maintain the sense of mystery inside.
58 H A N N A H HIGGINS
NOTES
1 George Brecht, 'Statement', Rene Block, ed, 1962 Wiesbaden Fluxus 1982, Wiesbaden,
Harlekin Art, and Berlin, Berliner Kunstlerprogrammem des D A A D , 1982.
2 Kristine Stiles, 'Between Water and Stone, Fluxus Performance: A Metaphysics of
Acts', in Elizabeth Armstrong and Joan Rothfuss, eds, In the Spirit of Fluxus
Minneapolis, M N , Walker Art Centre, 1993.
3 Ibid., p 65.
4 For this insight I a m indebted to the work of m y student Laurel Fredrickson for her
work ('The Upside-Down World: The Not M a d e in the W o r k of Robert Filliou', M A
thesis, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1997).
5 Wilfried Dorstel, Rainer Steinberg and Robert von Zahn, 'The Bauermeister Studio:
Proto-Fluxus in Cologne, 1960-1962', in Fluxus Virus 1962-1992, K e n Friedman, ed,
Cologne, Verlag Gallerie Schuppenhauer, 1992, p 56.
6 Maciunas to Bauermeister, undated, Archiv Mary Bauermeister, Historisches Archiv
Koln (HAStK, inv 1441, no. 25).
7 Stockhausen was to include the score for Originate and other works in Fluxus No. 2,
Western European Issue No. 1. George Maciunas, Notes for Projected Issues, 1962,
Archiv Sohm, Staatsgalerie Stuttgart. Unless otherwise indicated, all listed subsequent
archival materials are at Sohm.
8 Maciunas initially conceived of the festivals as financial engines for the projected Fluxus
magazine, which explains in part why he included Stockhausen in both places. George
Maciunas, Notes, 1962. Paik to Maciunas, undated.
9 Photograph by Peter Moore.
10 Author's notes. Public conversation between Alison Knowles, Allan Kaprow and Dick
Higgins, 'Fluxforum', The Wexner Centre for the Arts, Columbus, O H , 25 Feb 1994.
11 'Avant-Garde: Stuffed Bird at 48 Sharp', Time (18 Sept 1964).
12 Foubion Bowers, 'A Feast of Astonishments', The Nation (28 Sept 1964), p 174.
13 I a m using these behavioural categories as structural models for the various definitions
of Fluxus. The behavioural choice made by a given artist does not necessarily constitute
conscious choice of a definitive model for Fluxus.
14 M a c L o w to Maciunas, 25 April 1962.
15 Maciunas to Higgins and Knowles, 1963. Located at Archiv Sohm.
16 See Peter Burger, Theory of the Avant-Garde, trans Michael Shaw, Minneapolis, M N ,
University of Minnesota Press, pp 22-3.
17 Maciunas to Williams, Spoerri and Filliou, 1963.
18 George Maciunas, Fluxus News-Letter No. 7, 1 M a y 1963. Located at the Silverman
Archive, N e w York.
19 Melissa Harris, 'Fluxus Closing In: Salvatore Ala Gallery', Artforum, 29 (Jan 1991).
20 See Ina Blom's contribution to the present volume.
21 See the exhibition catalogue, Francesco Conz and the Intermedia Avant-Garde. Brisbane,
Queensland Gallery, 1997.
22 Henry Martin, An Introduction to George Brecht's Book of the Tumbler on Fire, Mila
Multhipla Edizioni, 1978.
23 Achille Bonito Oliva, 'Ubi Fluxus, ibi Motus', in Bonito Oliva, Gino Di Maggio and
Gianni Sassi, eds, Ubi Fluxus, ibi Motus, Venice Biennale and Milan, Mazzotta Editore
p 26. Emphasis added.
24 Giovanni Carandente, 'Opening Statement', ibid., p 12.
25 Joe Jones, 'Fluxus', ibid., p 15.
26 Henry Flynt, 'Mutations of the Vangarde', ibid., p 99.
27 Jon Hendricks, 'Aspects of Fluxus from the Gilbert and Lila Silverman Collection', Art
Libraries Journal, vol 8, no. 3 (Autumn 1983), pp 8-13.
FLUXUS FORTUNA 59
28 Jon Hendricks, ed, Fluxus Etc.: The Gilbert and Lila Silverman Collection, Bloomfield
Hills, M I , Cranbrook Academy of Art Museum, 1981.
29 'Although the group was held together by Maciunas, the movement's strength was its
diversity and independence of the many artists involved.' Jon Hendricks, Fluxus, Etc.
(flier), Cranbrook Academy of Art, Cranbrook, M I .
30 Jon Hendricks, et al., ed Fluxus Etc., Addenda I: the Gilbert and Lila Silverman
Collection, N e w York, Ink & Press, 1983.
31 Jon Hendricks, ed, Fluxus Etc., Addenda II: the Gilbert and Lila Silverman Collection.
Pasadena, C A , Baxter Art Gallery, California Institute of Technology, 1983.
32 Jon Hendricks and Thomas Kellein, Fluxus, London, Thames & Hudson, 1995.
33 Jon Hendricks, 'What is Fluxus?', exhibition flier for Neuberger Museum, State
University of N e w York at Purchase, Purchase, N e w York, 1983.
34 Grace Glueck, 'Some Roguish 60's Art Achieves M u s e u m Status', New York Times (13
Feb 1983), Section C.
35 Clive Phillpot, 'Fluxus: Magazines, Manifestos, Multum in Parvo', C Phillpot and Jon
Hendricks, Fluxus: Selections from the Gilbert and Lila Silverman Collection, N e w York
Museum of Modern Art, 1988, p 11.
36 T would like to discuss with you the possibility of a small Fluxus show at the M u s e u m
of Modern Art next Fall that would coincide with the publication of Fluxus Codex.'
Hendricks to Rive Castleman, 3 Nov. 1987, Gilbert and Lila Archive, N e w York, N Y .
37 Catherine Liu, 'Fluxus: Selections from the Gilbert and Lila Silverman Collection',
Artforum 27 (May 1989), p 89.
38 Robert C Morgan, 'Fluxus, M u s e u m of Modern Art', Flash Art International, 146
(May-June 1989), p 14.
39 Ibid.
40 Bruce Altschuler, 'Fluxus Redux', Arts Magazine, vol 64 (Sept 1989), pp 66-70.
41 Jean Brown, interview with Richard Candida Smith in The Fluxus Movement: Jean
Brown, Art History Oral Documentation Project (Oral History Programme, University
of California, Los Angeles, and the Getty Centre for the History of Art and the
Humanities, 1993), p 41.
42 Ibid., pp 57-61. M y emphasis.
43 Eric Vos, A Checklist of Archival Material for the Jean Brown Collection, The Getty
Centre, p 6. The list was completed in September 1990. M y emphasis.
44 Information based on the exhibition checklist for 'In the Spirit of Fluxus' provided by
the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, M N ; courtesy of Karen Moss.
45 Armstrong and Rothfuss, eds, 'In the Spirit of Fluxus', Minneapolis, M N : The Walker
Art Center, 1993.
46 Thoughts on the significance of these festivals have been developed from an earlier
description of them that appeared as a review entitled 'Totally Excellent: Fluxus 1992',
New Art Examiner (May 1993).
47 The a la carte performance format was repeated during Fluxus Festival Chicago at the
Arts Club in Fall, 1993.
48 For a general introduction to West German cultural policy during these years, see R o b
Burns and Wilfried van der Will, 'The Federal Republic, 1968 to 1990: From Industrial
Society to the Culture Society,' in German Cultural Studies: An Introduction, N e w York,
Oxford University Press, 1995.
49 Rene Block, Fluxus: Eine lange Geschichte mit vielen Knoten. Fluxus in Deutschland,
1962-1994, Institut fur Auslandsbeziehungen, Stuttgart, 1995.
50 Dick Higgins, 'Gateway (for Pierre Mercure)', in Rene Block, ed, Fluxus Da Capo: 1962
Wiesbaden 1992, Nassauischer Kunstverein, Wiesbaden, 1992, p 91.
51 Thomas Crow, 'Modernism and Mass Culture in the Visual Arts', in Pollock and After:
The Critical Debate, N e w York, Harper and R o w , 1985, p 257.
60 H A N N A H H I G G I N S
52 Emmett Williams, My Life in Flux and Vice Versa, London and N e w York, Thames
Hudson, 1992.
53 This is the term used by Emmett Williams in 'Zwolf Portraits', in Block, ed, Fluxus Da
Capo, p 148. It translates roughly as 'art factory'.
54 Ibid.
55 The event occurred at 80 Wooster Street, home of the Filmmakers' Cinematique, on 21
April 1973. Special thanks to Joanne Hendricks for locating that information for m e in
Hendricks and Phillpot, eds, Fluxus: Selections from the Gilbert and Lila Silve
Collection. N e w York, Museum of Modern Art, 1988.
56 Williams, My Life in Flux and Vice Versa, p 58.
57 Reproduced in ibid., p 79.
58 Robert C Morgan, 'The Art and Archeology of Alison Knowles', in Block, ed, Fluxus
Da Capo, p. 124.
59 Maciunas to Knizak, 19 M a y 1966. Quoted in Fluxus Codex, ed Jon Hendricks, New
York, Harry N Abrams, 1988, pp 267-8.
PART II
THEORIES OF FLUXUS
INA BLOM:
BOREDOM AND OBLIVION
'zero' that will allow all points of experience to enter into a free play of multiplicities.
maybe it is precisely because Cage is so fundamentally devoted to the transcendental
universality and m a y b e also formalism of a certain strain of modern art that his principle of
free play 'automatically' extends from theory of art to a general social philosophy, without
excess and without resistance. Beside the music and teaching of Schdnberg, the paintings of
Mondrian - which are nothing if not universalist in their aspiration - were, after all, one of
his most important sources of inspiration. A n d while he felt close to the element of freedom
in the compositions of Charles Ives, he disliked the touch of 'Americana' in this music; that
is, the representational elements in the quotes from different popular musical sources. In
Cage's world, the life-art question is the one fundamental question of immersion. A n d
because subjectivity is, from the outset, the category that must be transcended in this notion
of immersion, the life-art boundary must disappear universally, without regard for h o w or
on what terms different kinds of 'memories' or subjectivities m a y even c o m e to formulate
such a division or its eventual upheaval. The musicalising of any sound can only happen
through a mind that is - on principle and in universal terms - set to the measure of zero. A
composition by John Cage, through emphasising an intention to extend the terms of music
endlessly, is then also a theoretical/practical exercise towards a 'better world' - a world
relinquished from the destructive forces of desire.
With m a n y of the artists connected to Fluxus, the passage from art to social theory is not
quite so automatic. In fact, it would seem that their main contribution would be to add
friction to this passage. A s they gain access to thefieldcreated by Cage - the principally open
field of endless heterogeneity and multiplicity - they immediately start making their marks on
thisfield.They honour the importance and value of thisfieldby investing in it and working
through it: in relation to Cage the teacher they are in m a n y ways model students. But in this
working through, they inevitably redraw it in different terms. For it is probably inevitable
that they should submit this field to the kind of marks that it would - in principle - be
immune to: the marks of ownership, of signatures, of different subjectivities, intentions and
representations. The marks of particularia, in fact - of details and ephemera working their
way out of all proportion, straying far behind the structured confines of Cage's multiplicity.
Thefieldsuddenly is not only marked, but slanted, out of joint. It seems at times to lack
exactly that quality which Cage emphasised most of all - notably spiritual discipline or
virtuosity, as expressed by the zero 'a priori'. For instance, Cage emphasises the ethical
possibilities of non-intentionality: 'If you're nonintentional, then everything is permitted. If
you're intentional, for instance if you want to murder someone, then it's not permitted.'
Higgins, for one, seems prepared to take him at his word, but only through a redrafting of
this statement that pushes its implications or limits of meaning. A n d the implication spelled
out by Higgins is the word 'danger' - the second vector in his essay on immersion (boredom
and danger), and also the title of an early series of works called 'Danger Music'. Higgins
essentially follows Cage's focus on oblivion or unknowing as a prerequisite for immersion,
but at the same time as he takes this step into the principle of indeterminacy, he immediately
frames the unframeable. 'Danger' is a sign which frames - it points out the limits of
immersion. O n the one hand 'danger' seems to point, in an intensified and 'deep' way, right
into that 'reality' in which art is supposed to be subsumed. A n d on the other hand it seems to
highlight this reality as a place of consequences and implications, fear, trouble and desire; in
BOREDOM A N D OBLIVION 65
short to highlight it as a place that would fall outside or be the outside of Cage's all-inclusive
field of indeterminacy. In this way, Higgins' spelling out 'danger' could be said to operate at
the limits of indeterminacy.
It could be suggested, then, that by submitting Cage to the change he himself prescribed
(he was after all the one to point out that his o w n n a m e was an anagram of 'I Change'), m a n y
of the artists connected to Fluxus were working out practices of immersion precisely by
realising the necessity of negotiating its terms. This 'it' is exactly the question here: what is the
space, situation, context, possibility of immersion? 'Changing Cage' might have been a way
of dealing with the fact that the space of immersion could not be formulated without an
engagement with, and through, borders and limits - cages - of all sorts.
BOREDOM
In 1966 Dick Higgins published his influential 'Intermedia' essay, stating that the new and
interesting forms of art did not limit theirfieldof operation to a question of artistic media,
but tended to operate between or outside particular media or categories.6 A comparison
between this essay and the actual artistic developments it described might lead to more
precise definitions. A s a term, 'intermedia' was designed to cover those instances where the
artist did not simply combine different artistic media, but worked against the grain of any
categorial organisations by means of strategies of displacement. In contrast to the term
'multimedia', 'intermedia' did not denote a formal identification but rather a strategic intent
or a performative.7 Then the medial aspect of the work could be described in terms of
transmedia: that is, as an agent of change or transcoding. Intermedia's m a n y attempts to
formulate 'betweens' or 'outsides' did not express a dream about the idyllic state of the
unmediated. It simply dealt with the principle of mediation as a passage from one state
to another.
Around the same time, however, Higgins' lesser-known essay on boredom and danger
somehow seems to strike closer to the core of the particular intermedial strategies that
developed in the late 50s and early 60s. Higgins sets out as if he desperately needs to m a k e
sense of this puzzling concept, but it is immediately apparent that for him boredom is a
positive term, a point of departure for a new orientation. The apparent lack of stimuli in
boring art involves the surroundings in ways not apparent when stimuli appear as exciting
along certain lines of expectation. W h e n Higgins tries to explain the effect of boring art such
as, for instance, Eric Satie's Vexations, in which an 'utterly serious 32-bar piece' is played
very slowly 840 times (a performance takes twenty-five hours), he repeatedly returns to the
way in which such works will fade into their environment, become an integral part of their
surroundings.8 Boredom destroys the boundaries that keep the surge of intensities within the
fenced-off space of the work. N o w the intensities m o v e along different lines, as in a Cage-
class experience referred to by Higgins, where the students were instructed to do two different
things each, in total darkness, so that one could not visually determine the beginning and the
end of the piece.9 Higgins describes the way in which the intensities in this piece 'appeared in
waves' as expectation of structure mingled with the experience of non-structure; h o w the
sense of time was warped as work and non-work could not be distinguished as separate areas
of perception.
66 I N A B L O M
In a set of notes dealing with the experience the spectator would have with his play St
Joan of Beaurevoir, Higgins comments on a different aspect of boredom. Anticipating
audience reactions, he describes different levels of involvement developing through the piece,
such as boredom, irritation, understanding and new boredom. 'Then', he writes, 'the witness
will ideally disappear into the piece. H e will stop seeing himself and start seeing events as
events ... The general stasis of the piece will be soothing. Quantities will become relative and
not numerical.'10 Boredom, in other words, has the capacity to cause disappearance on two
different levels which must be experienced as reciprocal: the work will disappear into the
surroundings, and the spectator will disappear into the work.
This situation describes the kind of symmetrical relationship where the two sides are
different by being the reverse of one another, as in a mirror. The work sees 'itself in the
surroundings, as the surroundings sees 'itself in the work. But in this throwing back and
forth, the identity of each is cancelled - one no longer knows which side of the mirror one is
on. Usually identity is established with a simple self-reflexivity: I k n o w that I am. W h e n
Higgins describes the experience of the piece in the darkened room, he describes a situation
where this simple reflexivity proliferates into a series of repetitive questions concerning the
boundaries between work and perceiving subject. The intensities of the piece m o v e along the
lines of questions such as 'whether the piece was finished or not, what the next thing to
happen would be, etc.'11 A n d this repetition has the capacity to undo identity. It works to
highlight the simulacral quality of a mirroring in which the two sides of the mirror are
confused so that 'nothing' or 'everything' is finally mirrored. Boredom - or the level beyond
the initial experience of boredom which Higgins calls 'super boring' - essentially has to do
with indistinction, disappearance and oblivion.
Oblivion on the level of the work, oblivion on the level of the spectator w h o engages with
the reality of the work. In 1959 Higgins worked with a series of works called 'Contributions'
and which developed from this principle. O n e piece calls for the production of a sound 'that
is neither opposed to nor directly derived from' the environment in which it will be
produced.12 The piece is in fact an instructive riddle. H o w can one determine that which is
neither opposed to nor derived from a context? Obviously, there is no way to avoid either of
these parameters as long as sound is reflected in terms of predetermined relationships and as
long as one sees the context as a given, closed whole. The only way to arrive at the freedom of
this neither/nor situation seems to be to accept a fundamental independence of sounds and
an equally fundamental dispersion of context. Then anything will do, and this anything will
simply contribute to the oblivion of the situation.
Yet the way in which Higgins makes the question of context become central to the piece
somehow spoils the innocence of this last solution. Sounds m a y be independent (Higgins
preferred to use the word 'independence' rather than 'indeterminacy'), but the piece still
forces a continual reflexion on the interplay between context and not-context: W h a t is the
'right' context of a sound? 13 W h e n this question is asked, sounds are suddenly no longer
simply abstract 'musical' phenomena. If sounds appear to be 'independent', it is only because
they have been recently 'liberated'. They come from somewhere, and they carry excesses of
signification. It is as if Higgins is not willing to simply accept what is generally thought of as
the immersive character of sound and the collapse of meaning with which it is associated. In
this way the piece delves into a critical formulation of the borders of sound itself.
BOREDOM A N D OBLIVION 67
EVENT
What is crucial to this notion of boredom is that it engages with a term that was to become so
central to early Fluxus as to be even identified as a 'form'. This term is the 'Event'. According
to Higgins, at the level of super-boredom one is finally capable of 'seeing events as events'.14
One is, in other words, exposed to the workings of the Event. A n d the event is in its turn
associated with danger, for it seems implicit in Higgins' statement that the event essentially
works to disrupt boundaries and promote oblivion.
But in order to grasp more precisely what the event comes to m e a n in this context, it is
necessary to go back to some of itsfirstformulations as they appeared in the writings of
Jackson M a c L o w and in the work and notes of George Brecht. 'In the "Five Biblical Poems"
the metric unit is the event rather than the foot, the syllable, the caesura or the cadence',
Jackson M a c L o w wrote in a 1963 comment to hisfirstchance poems from 1955.15 T o say
that the event constitutes the metric unit of the p o e m has consequencesfirstof all for the
question of time in his work. The ordinary metric units of poetry set up a temporal structure
that is integral to the work, organising the poem's elements in particular relationships. W h e n
the metric unit becomes the event, it crosses the threshold of this structure, opening the work
to temporality in general. The work is no longer a rhythmically patterned expression of
something non-temporal: it is inscribed in a larger, all-encompassing temporality that might
be described as the temporality of sense itself.16 O r one could simply say that it collapses the
notion of art-time into real time.
This 'real time' is, of course, on one level a parallel to the resetting to zero of John Cage,
in which all elements are levelled. But what is particular and interesting about the workings
of M a c Low's event is h o w it makes large parts of his work reformulate what Benjamin
Buchloh has described as the combinatory impasse of avant-garde art - that is, the strategy
of reducing symbolic language to its lexical or phonetic units by swapping letters around in a
sort of visual/verbal/vocal collage.17 Despite the 'operations' of chance on symbolical
language in his poetry, M a c L o w seems to frame this Cage-like technique by the reverse
possibility: that of retaining the highest possible degree of lexical, semantic or 'emotional'
content. The score for a 1961 piece, Thanks, seems, for instance, to be a set-up for such a
collaged word-salad or cacophony. But a closer reading reveals that quite ordinary speech or
communication might be a perfectly valid interpretation of the piece.18
Huge portions of representational elements always remain in M a c Low's poetry. In an
early work, such as the 'Five Biblical Poems', all of the words and word groups are derived
from one sequence of the Bible and are clearly recognisable as such, establishing afieldof
meaning in a clear and consistent way. A number of later works m a k e a more radical turn.
Here, large sections of texts taken from different sources are left almost untouched. A series
of poems named after cities ('London, Paris, Sydney') consists of almost entire passages from
newspapers or gossip magazines. Yet other series use personal ads or long excerpts from the
writings of Marquis de Sade or from scientific journals. W h a t these pieces seem to have in
c o m m o n is an experience of operating on two simultaneous but incommensurable levels. O n
the one hand, there is a sense of calm semantic unity. O n the other hand, this unity is subtly
broken by minor ruptures, convulsive patterns that m a k e certain unexpected marks in the
graphic image or sudden minor folds or interruptions in the semiotic processing of the text.
68 INA B L O M
In this the texts Come to resemble the crystalline surfaces of the kind of postcard that will
subtly change its image when the surface is flipped into different positions. The possibly
immersive space of reading, of deep knowledge, passion or interest in onefieldof meaning or
another is not unrelated to the indeterminate space of convulsions and disruptions - of
oblivion. They are at an angle in relation to one another, connected and separated by a
simple mental flip. A n d what is at stake is of course the control and movement of this
flipping. In the texts of M a c L o w it is slip-sliding - out of control. W h a t M a c L o w formulates
with his event is this movement at the edge.
SPACE
Such a 'visualist' focus on surfaces reappears in the work of George Brecht, where it seem
proliferate into a whole topography of events, or what he chose to call 'an expanded universe
of events'. In this way his work might be seen as an elaboration on the question of the space
of immersion, since space is in fact a 'natural' metaphor for the experience of immersion. Yet
for this very reason the notion of space is also a highly problematic one. It would seem to
imply a generalised and neutral expanse that would seem to either lie outside of or
marginalise the conflicts and desires that would provide the frame for the different points of
view from which any notion of space is necessarily m a d e up. But despite the essential silence
and non-conceptuality of Brecht's work, the question of space actually goes through several
transformations or renamings. It is,first,a 'field', then an 'expanding universe', and - finally
- a 'book'. A n d each of these terms rework 'space' through the question of borders and their
transgression.
For a central focus in the work of George Brecht could be said to be the question 'How
are the things in the world connected?'. A n d this question is, fundamentally, a reworking or
reversing of the lesson learnt from Cage about the autonomous behaviour of sounds or
phenomena. A s a way of exploring this question, Brecht starts to work with the notion of the
event, exploring its meaning and its potential until it seems to become the point around which
everything in his work turns. The crucial aspect of Brecht's event is, initially, the way in
which it is used to m a p a landscape of boredom. Like so m a n y others in the mid-50s, Brecht
was obsessed with the idea of chance. Following the lead of Jackson Pollock, he made
paintings by dropping ink on canvas and then crumbling the canvas into a ball so that the ink
would dry in unforeseeable patterns. But somehow this activity did not quite do justice to
Brecht's more particular fascination with certain aspects of chance expressed by modern
science, and he soon found other approaches. A s a point of departure, he starts out by
reworking the traditional distinction between events and objects (or action and matter) - the
reason behind the slightly puzzling fact that Brecht seems to m a k e use of the term 'Event'
only whenever anything is particularly object-like. This strategy wasfirstdemonstrated with
his 'Towards Events' exhibition at the Reuben Gallery in 1959. The title is of interest because
of its apparent incongruity with the most obvious aspect of the show's contents: a number of
found objects, standing alone or in constellations. The ambiguity m a y seem to be solved by
the fact that the objects in question are to 'be performed', but 'performance' in this case is
completely unspecific, and has nothing to do with notions of musical or theatrical
performance. With the piece called Case - a picnic suitcasefilledwith various objects - goes
B O R E D O M A N D OBLIVION 69
the instruction that the objects can be used 'in ways appropriate to their nature'. The
instruction for Dome - an arrangement of objects under a glass dome - barely indicates that
the contents can be 'arrayed', then returned to their places. For the piece called Cabinet there
is no instruction. It is simply a found cabinet with various rearrangeable objects.
This interchangeability of event/object gets a reverse treatment in Brecht's performance
scores. While starting out as instructions for performance, later versions of the pieces seem to
condense into a kind of objectification that makes their relationship to the category of
performance or action uncertain. His 1959 version of Time Table Music indicates a railway
station as a performance area, where a railway timetable works as a basic instrument for
distributing the actions of the performers. But in a 1961 version called Time Table Event, the
multiplicity of all these different elements has been erased, including the idea of performers.
N o w , all that remains is the railway station (any railway station) and a duration to be chosen
from a timetable. Apparently the piece consists of anything happening within that duration.
It is simply a found temporal object: the railway station is a place marked in its foundation
by the 'when' of waiting.
A n even more radical development takes place with Drip Music (Drip Event), a 1959-62
piece developed from a notebook piece called Burette Music. While the initial composition
was conceived for a number of small burettes set to drip on different sound sources, the final
piece suggests only the concept of dripping in general, taking the piece out of the explicitly
performative and into the realm of all dripping phenomena. What characterises the last
versions of these two pieces is the way 'event' measures time just as much in terms of pre-
existing phenomena or objects. A n d then we see that time, in these works, is conceived much
like a sort of secret agent whose way of operating is either warp or continual metamorphosis.
The reasoning behind these pieces takes as its point of departure the questions of the
premises of physical science, and particularly the question of which irreducible elements
could constitute a scientific consideration of time. Field theory, theories of relativity and
quantum physics provided what Brecht, in his 1958/59 notebook, called 'The Structure of a
N e w Aesthetic', summarised by keywords such as 'space-time relativity', 'matter-energy
equivalence', 'uncertainty principle', 'probability', 'observer-observed' and 'paradox as a
reflection of our inability to imagine a simple model of the Universe'.19 These general
keywords served to express the difficulty of deciding the ontological status of object versus
event, as exemplified for instance by the electrons in the atomic structure: they can only be
described in terms of a probabilisticfieldof presence.20
In a 1959 essay on chance operations, however, Brecht introduced the event as part of a
model of thought that would add a significant specification to the notion of the immersive
space of boredom. In order to explain h o w notions of causality disintegrate into probability
or indeterminacy, he invokes the principle of the second law of thermodynamics - a law
originally designed to explain the theory of the gradual cooling or loss of energy in the
universe. The principle of entropy explained by this law reflects the fact that heat always
travels from a hotter body to a cooler one, as for instance in the case of an ice-cube placed in
a glass of water at room temperature. This process obviously does not result in a cooler ice-
cube and warmer water - instead the ice-cube melts, resulting in a levelling of the temperature
extremes.
This is the example chosen by Brecht. W h a t is important in his account of this process of
70 INA B L O M
melting and mixing values is the stress he puts on the fact that this process cannot be
attributed to one single cause. The ice-cube becoming cooler is not impossible. It is just
improbable, and this improbability is statistical. A s in Maxwell's statistical interpretation of
what happens when there is a mixture of gases at different temperatures (Brecht refers to this
as a good conceptual model of entropy), the molecules of the warmer gas collide with the
molecules of the cooler, imparting some of their energy in the collision. The result is a
mixture where the total amount of energy falls somewhere between the two extremes, but this
is just a summation of a very large number of individual chance events. The loss of energy-
or the process of entropy - must be attributed to a very large number of independent causes
which in their individual intersections each represent an 'event'. This summation of a large
number of independent causes, in other words, describes an entropic passage from one state
to another - a linear, non-cyclical process in the sense that it cannot be undone or reversed,
since this would entail compressing all the independent chains of effects into a single cause.
A n infinite information barrier separates the different stages in the passage from one
another.21
Not the least part of the interest in such entropic processes is due to the w a y they seem to
represent the passage of time itself, while at the same time wreaking havoc on boundaries and
distinctions, including those that 'keep time'. Brecht's example of the melting ice-cube is an
example of a m o v e towards indistinction or uniformity, a fading out against the background
and a loss of energy that essentially matches Higgins' description of boredom. But the
metaphors used by Brecht when explaining the principle of entropy shows the tensions and
ambivalences involved in this question: ambivalences concerning precisely the question of
boundaries. In so m a n y of his works there is a preoccupation with the mysteries and riddles
of sameness, and yet in his explanation of the entropic principle he seems rather to focus on
the fact that entropy promotes probability - an infinite universe of events and possible
connections. H e explains this point of view in a notebook entry:
The unity of nature does not lie inherent in things, but is concomitant of nature's being
what Ifindit to be. Hence, since humans have an infinite capacity to invent properties
and tofindsimilarities and differences in things, based on these properties, relations can
be found between even an infinity of things. Hence all nature is unified by man's
conception/conceiving of it.22
This realisation of an infinite number of possible relationships was to become the working
principle behind all his subsequent work. Atfirst,however, this possibility is expressed in
generalising or universalising terms that would actually seem to give hints of a sort of
topographic overview of an endless area of dispersion. A s expressed in an unrealised project
for a switchboard that would generate 'any light or sound events of any desired
characteristics to occur at any points in space and time': 'The event, m a d e actual, is one
chosen from a universe of all possible lights/sounds from all possible space points.' A s an
answer to the question of h o w this infinite universe of pure possibility can be engendered,
Brecht posits the following three parameters, which seems like a scientific rewriting of Cage's
notion of zero: T ) M a x i m u m generality. 2) M a x i m u m flexibility. 3) M a x i m u m economy.'
It was along these lines that Brecht's planned his 1963 Y a m Festival, a festival that was
supposed to function as an 'ever-expanding universe of events'.23 The festival could equally
be described as a 'field', just as Brecht conceived of the totality of his o w n work as afield-
BOREDOM A N D OBLIVION 71
SCALE
The instruction piece about sameness pokes fun at a thinking that pits same against different:
same and different m a y be in extension of one another. But another such piece places the
weight somewhat differently and in fact sets out to redraw the concept of space in Brecht's
'universe' or 'field': 'Determine the centre of an object or event. Determine the centre more
72 INA B L O M
accurately. Repeat until further accuracy is impossible.' Obviously, entropy is all about the
loss of centre, the impossibility of retaining the notion of centre for any length of time. A n d
so, on one level, Brecht's instruction is pure redundancy, a recipe for bouncing off the even
surface of sameness. But on a different level of understanding, a centre - or even a
proliferation of centres - can be found with absolute accuracy.
T o get at this possibility one has to resort to the question of scale that is essential to a
cartographic m o d e of representation. A n d Brecht's proposition is in fact an allegory of
cartography. Imagine finding the centre of a m a p of a city. T o 'determine the centre more
accurately' all one would need is a m a p on a different scale, in which case the centre would be
a part of the city, an area or a street. With each new scale, each new accuracy, the centre
would be removed, change places - from street to building, from building to room, and so on,
d o w n to the specks of dust on the floor or the cracks in the wall. But the cracks in the wall
might be a point of departure for new mappings, new proliferations. A s Robert Smithson
pointed out some years later, size might pertain to the object, but scale is what pertains to art.
Scale not size makes it possible to perceive a crack in the wall as the Grand Canyon, or the
organisation of a room as the solar system. 'Scale', he wrote, 'depends on one's capacity to be
conscious of the actualities of perception.'28
Brecht's vision of infinite connections between things is in fact a vision about the
operations of scale - a fact that is clearly demonstrated in a number of his works - and it is at
this level his work might also be said to engage in a strategy of mapping. F r o m this point of
view his work is not so m u c h about wiping out boundaries as about their continual
redrafting, proliferation and transformation due to what one might call the 'ravages' of scale.
For the strategy of mapping, in Brecht's work, is not one which would correspond wholly to
the textbook definition of maps as scale models of reality (models in which visible marks
portray relative positions, sizes, distances and locations of phenomena w e believe are real).
The question of scale that makes a crack in the wall turn into the Grand Canyon is not
primarily a question of model to reality, but of passages, transformations and connections
from one space or level of reality to another. The cartographic strategies in his work stem
from the insight, elaborated by m a n y writers and artists, that a m a p is an experimentation in
contact with the real, and that its most interesting feature is that of being open and
connectible in all of its dimensions. It is detachable, reversible and open to the constant
modifications that are the hallmarks of performance - or, for that matter - Brecht's notion of
the Event. Cartography m a y facilitate connections between disparate phenomena, but at the
expense of a hyperintensive focus on borders and limits.
Such connections between the disparate are explored over and over again in Brecht's mute
constellations of objects on chairs, in cabinets or in specimen boxes. A s events, his objects
perform: they stretch and leap along the lines of changing scales, into new areas - as described
in the piece called Delivery: 'An area is set aside. Delivery of objects to the area is arranged.'29
For the operations of scale imply sudden leaps - a sort of travel in which one does not trace a
trajectory but simply accepts 'instant' displacements. But these sudden leaps are not always
simply implied in the still, almost 'frozen' separateness of his objects. In a number of works it
is actually highlighted on a purely visual level, as if providing a cue or a methodological
recipe to the workings of scale. In the box called 'Page 52' from his Book of the Tumbler on
Fire, scale creates connections between the dark horizon on a drawing of a small pond and a
BOREDOM A N D OBLIVION 73
series of 'dark horizons' on a grid structure. Rings in the water becoming eye-shaped because
perspectival 'deformations' echo an eye-shaped object in the box. In a different boxed
assembly, a twisted orange peel 'mimes' the position of a ballet dancer in a newspaper cut-
out, just as the ashes at the tip of a cigarette in another box is a 'smaller' version of the rough-
textured object close to it. In yet another box, the little piece of dark thread and the two-
textured piece of fabric works as an extreme enlargement of the lines and textures in some
black-and-white photographs of a stone building.30
The connections and continuities in these works are placed along purely optical lines;
scale deals with the operations of visual perception. There is, however, a new kind of
opticality or visualist tack to these works that makes up for the missing centre. Deleuze calls
it 'point of view' or 'perspectivism', since perspective implies, at once, distance and
continuity. Point of view on a variation replaces the centre of afigureor a configuration in a
world that might n o w be described in terms of the variable curvature of a fold. Point of view
relates to the way the new object or objectile 'exists only through its metamorphoses or the
declension of its profiles'.31 Point of view is then 'a power of arranging cases' - Brecht simply
called his earliest exhibition 'an arrangement', while the objects it contained were to be
'arrayed'.32
The jumps and leaps of scale is what gives a point of view on the continuities between
these objects, folding contexts and boundaries around each other. At the same time it seems
to deal with phenomena that are somehow reduced to pure surfaces - surfaces that present
themselves to vision. It is the surface connections that produce the awareness of scale and
possible continuities between unlike things. Like crystals, the meaning of Brecht's objects
does not develop from whatever inner depth they will convey, but from the way they will
produce series of new surfaces and angles, in a development of movement and freezing. For
even as Brecht produces leaps and connections, he always seems to show his objects as if in
the same inert or frozen state.
This is probably w h y crystals seem to occupy such an important place in Brecht's
thinking. His notion of the event seems to link u p with the particular entropic quality of
crystals.33 For the entropy of crystals is quite paradoxical. Their clear surfaces, seemingly so
structured, calm and orderly, are the result of a loss of tension and energy in their geological
strata. In fact, they represent the strange situation where entropic dissolution is also an image
of entropic order and symmetry: order and disorder fold around each other and become
continuous. W h a t Brecht maps, then, is not so m u c h a world that is 'finally' entropic - he
does not seem very concerned with the sublime sense of loss that a notion such as 'entropy' or
'lack of energy' might occasion. W h e n he writes about the second law of thermodynamics, he
does not touch upon this aspect at all. W h a t he m a p s is a world of surfaces and continuities.
As an effect of this domain of surfaces, Brecht is actually able to formulate spatial
difference within the map-surfaces that usually presents us with a model of the continuity of
space. In map-pieces such as the Wedding of Havana and Miami or the Three Translocations
of the Isle of Wight, the surface quality of the m a p has been doubly realised, so that it actually
becomes a send-up of the homogeneous horizontality of this particular world model. A s
Brecht makes the territories m o v e about, they are reduced to 'significant' visual spots on a
flat picture-map, to be placed and replaced as a matter of form. The 'marrying' of Havana
and Miami is as real but also as illegitimate as the constant stream of refugees which crosses
74 I N A B L O M
SOUND/VOICE
If Brecht reworks the space of immersion by reformulating the concept of space itself, o
artists would rework the object that is generally seen as the model for immersion itself;
notably sound Sound is believed to be unique in the sense that it has 'presence' - a presence
that envelops the subject and erodes its bodily limits. A s Frances Dyson has pointed out, the
ears are orifices that are always open: the ears allow the subject to be continuously and
uncontrollably surrounded by sonic disturbances. Sound ignores the boundary of the skin. It
is present both externally in the environment and internally as a resonance or vibration. It
evades the distinction between outside and inside, and so makes way for a loss of self.38
Cage m a d e the most of this notion of the autonomy or immersive presence of sounds
when he liberated them from the constrictions of harmony. Sounds, he claimed, were
'beings', and as beings, part of nature. Yet the being of sound is not for this reason free and
B O R E D O M A N D OBLIVION 75
autonomous. In Cage's work sounds seem to be free only at the expense of being 'music': the
tendency in Cage to musicalise any sound actually rules out whole dimensions of aurality.
Douglas K a h n has pointed out that this collapse of sound into a problematic of musical
sound betrays a contradiction at the core of Cage's musical philosophy. Cage was concerned
with the possibility of moving away from the anthropomorphic perspective of music, but by
retaining the idea of music as the benevolent and all-comprising framework of 'any' sound,
contradicts this position and essentially reaffirms the modernist concern for the boundaries
of art. W h a t is at stake here is Cage's insistence on the naturalness of sounds, and the
ecological, non-humanist perspective according to which sounds could be approached as
beings. But this perspective is mired in an idealist and a priori opposition between culture and
nature: an ecological perspective on sound shouldfirstof all depart from the historical
determination of 'nature' and the social incursion into nature.39 W h a t falls outside this
natural and non-humanist perspective is, in other words, all of those instances in which
sound is not merely abstract vibrations 'in the air', but social phenomena that function in
terms of memory and significance, context and shifting frameworks - that is, sounds capable
of semiosis. From this perspective the boundary of music m a y be eroded by the overriding
perspectives of aurality (or auralities) in general and in their various particularities.
But it was precisely these 'other' dimensions of sound that were explored as the students in
John Cage's composition class at the N e w School of Social Research brought their class
lessons outside the classroom context; and this was also precisely why Cage condemned this
activity for lack of 'spiritual virtuosity', and on the whole maintained an ambivalent
relationship to the activities associated with Fluxus. His 1958 and 1959 composition classes
triggered some of thefirstcollective 'pre-Fluxus' actions as students assembled under the
name of the N e w York Audio Visual Group performed their exercises from Cage's class at
Larry Poons' Epitome Coffee Shop. 40 Fearing a dispersal of his principles into an attitude of
'anything goes', Cage strongly emphasised the need for discipline, which generally meant
emptying yourself from subjecthood, society and context in order to become an empty
container for the nature of sound
A general lack of faith in the category of music was, however, often the productive drive
for these experiments. 'Is it a fault of an event that it does not produce an apparent sound?',
Dick Higgins wrote, T a m tired of music [...] nothing is to be left but theatres, and maybe
those will disappear for m e too. Then I can begin again somewhere else.'41 N a m June Paik,
for his part, complained that for all his years of studying the aesthetics of music, he still had
not found a satisfactory answer to the important question of what music is.42 But Paik's
question about the 'what' of music is entirely rhetorical: he poses it only at the moment when
he is able to displace it, to demonstrate its relative position and its momentary insignificance.
Cage's ali-inclusiveness could not provide a real answer because it essentially responds to the
question of the 'what' of music - an affirmation of boundaries despite all. A n d so he
displaces Cage's all-inclusiveness as yet another form: T a m tired of renewing the form of
music - serial or aleatoric, graphic orfivelines, instrumental or bellcanto [sic], screaming or
action, tape or live. I must renew the ontological form of music.'43
But for Paik this ontological renewal was not about finding a new musical 'being'. O n the
contrary, the renewal was above all a question of creating a split in music's ideal unity, as
implied in his term 'post music'. H e is even aware of the pitfalls of the term, its potential
76 INA B L O M
double bind: T never use therefore this holy word "happening" for m y "concerts", which are
equally snobbish as those of Franz Liszt. I a m just more self-conscious or less hypocritical
than m y anti-artist friends.'44 Following this statement, Paik sums up Western art music in
terms of a series of blunt and rather funny sociological analyses, ending on a note which even
includes the newest and most immersive strategies of boredom: 'New American style boring
music is probably a reaction and resistance against the too thrilling Hollywood movies.' To
move past or post music, Paik realises the need to leave the domain of the 'what'; but since he
also realises the impossibility of 'just' leaving, his answer is a strategy of displacement that
will replay music in terms of its possible excesses of signification. Music will be eroded by the
semiotic remainder that is generally placed at music's margins.
A n d so he displaces 'what' by 'when' - the 'what' of music becoming subsequent to his
o w n new question of the 'when' of music - in other words a leap to total contextualisation:
This W H E N (time of day and day of year, a very interesting measure, which shall be
intensely developed and exploited in m y post music The Monthly Review of the University of
Avant Garde Hinduism) .. .'45 A n d a part of this strategy of displacement is an initial
disavowal of any sensual plenitude that might pull back to music's abstract domain: 'Post
music is as calm, as cold, as dry, as non-expressionistic as m y television experiments. Y o u get
something in a year. W h e n you are about to forget the last one you received you get
something again. This has a fixed form and this is like the large ocean ... calm sunny calm
rainy calm windy calm sunny [.. .]' 4 6
Paik even displaced the potential pathos of 'post' by literalising the concept and playing
off the many levels of meaning produced by this action. For his post music is also a
composition that is rhythmically structured by the huge social, national and international
organisation k n o w n as the Postal Service. His post music is a composition that is formed as a
Monthly Review ..., to be distributed by mail, of course. Paik conceived of this composition
as a series of objects mailed to subscribers for a yearly fee of $8; a m o n g the objects proposed
were 'genuine water from Dunkerque in organic glass bottle, the red earth from Auschwitz in
an un-breakable polyethylene tube, or dirty nails of John Cage, cut in 1963, or cortizone
bottle of George Maciunas, or arm-pit hair of a Chicagoan negro prostitute etc .. .'47
It is as if, in direct response to the neutrality and emptiness propagated by John Cage,
Paik expressly chooses objects laden with the m e m o r y of recent political atrocities, of
illnesses, of sex and the body, including 'traces' or 'residue' from the body of Cage himself.
These objects effectively serve in a strategy of 'changing Cage', for the use of the Postal
Service and its expertise in distribution is obviously also a pun on the principle of distribution
of disparate effects that was one of the main lessons derived from Cage. By the help of an
insignificant structure - an empty framework waiting to be filled, precluding any actual
relation between the structure and the 'filling material' - objects or sounds could be
distributed throughout the compositions. Cage's comment on Jasper Johns' flag paintings
explains this particular preoccupation with structure and distribution, since Johns' paintings
are not paintings of a flag: 'The roles are reversed: beginning with the flag, a painting was
made. Beginning, that is, with structure, the division of a whole into parts corresponding to
the parts of a flag, a painting was made which both obscures and clarifies the underlying
structure.
Paik, of course, undermines this notion of insignificant or empty structure. The rhythm
BOREDOM A N D OBLIVION 77
and function of a postal service can hardly be separated from the social reality of the goods it
distributes, the rules and concerns governing this distribution, and, not least, the shifting and
insecure temporal frameworks associated with this institution. Sarcastic expressions like 'the
check is in the mail', say it all. The 'when' of post music is not the 'when' of a neutral
temporal framework, but (like Brecht's railway station) the 'when' of waiting and frustration,
of lost and found, of detours and delays. If anything, it invests indeterminacy with
significance and emotion, trace and memory, all modified by possibilities of oblivion, failure
and actual displacement.
The significance of this uncertain and unstable 'when' was at the core of Paik's work with
electronics and media - hisfinalm o v e to displace and disperse musical insights and strategies
through the huge processors of cultural meaning that are the mass media. Like Brecht, Paik
was interested in the indeterminate nature of the electron, and repeatedly pointed out the fact
that T V images, (electronic images) were indeterminate in their very foundation.49 They were
images one could neither hold on to nor control - images where the stability of the 'what' was
always moderated by a radical 'when'. Despite the strong interest in electronics a m o n g
composers, this aspect had largely gone unnoticed, Paik claimed: electronic composers were
still caught in the deterministic forms of serialism and bound to the linear tracks of sound-
tape.50
His T V experiments were in other words to be something entirely different from a merely
optical version of musical indeterminacy or interest in electronics.51 In fact they had the force
to attack musical self-centredness at the core, since the new dominance of electronic media
indicated (to Paik) a society increasingly 'infiltrated' by indeterminacy. His 1963 Exposition
of Music - Electronic Television showed (violently) prepared pianos alongside TV-sets in
which the transmission was being destroyed or transformed in various ways, all thanks to the
'when', or the unstability, of the electron. Cage had experimented with prepared pianos
(placing objects on the strings to transform their sound at random), but Paik's preparations
were more like mutilations. The piano, seen as the cult object of a musical culture, was
submitted to the violence of transformation as the instrument n o w reappeared as a sort of
matter capable of becoming 'anything'. A n d so, the transformed pianos, laden with all sorts
of objects and debris, mirrored the violence of the electronic transformations and
transmutations on the screens. Paik lost n o time in pointing out the cultural significance
of such transformations due to the proliferation of live T V and all kinds of radio transmitters
(but also electronic equipment such as coffee machines and electronic drills). His
preoccupation with electronic images was simply one way of dealing with a permeability
of boundaries which would no longer - as in a Gesamtkunstwerk - concern just the 'arts'.
There was more indeterminacy in culture-at-large than in indeterminate art, but this 'larger'
indeterminacy could only present itself as excess or otherness. It could not, in other words, fit
into the space of even an open work.
In the context of this excessive indeterminacy, Paik repeatedly returns to the question of
boredom and oblivion. Boredom is in fact one of the main themes in m a n y of Paik's
statements about his new work. O n e of his comments resembles Higgins' anticipation of
audience reactions: 'In the beginning it is (probably) interesting, then later on it is boring -
don't give up! Then it is (probably) interesting again, then once more boring - don't give up!
Then it is (probably) interesting again, then once more boring - don't give up!'52 Then, Paik
78 INA BLOM
claims, one will m o v e to a level beyond beautiful and ugly, to a state of 'nothing' - an insight
close to Higgins' description of the ability of the spectator to disappear into the work. Paik's
way of linking the boundary-dissolving capacities of boredom with the transformative
capacities of electronic culture shows to what degree his work and thought is concerned with
a thinking that never pulls back to a final definition of music. O n the contrary, his work
seems concerned with h o w certain musical strategies and insights derived from Cage may
return as mere effects within a different conception of both image-culture and sound-culture.
If anything, Paik was hypersensitive to what K a h n calls the 'sociality of sound', and to the
social consequences for sound and aurality at large due to technology-induced changes in
social practices. M a y b e the most marked change due to these technologies is the mobility of
sounds or voices as effects 'cut-off from the internal audition of the speaker. The recorded or
amplified voice (to n a m e just two basic transformations) n o w returns to its speaker as other
or different, as it passes through any number of other spaces or contexts.
Paik, never content to let the technological apparatuses remain in any stable mechanical
or reproductive form, would identify the technology itself with the notion of sound to the
extent of transforming the apparatus endlessly. His apparatuses do not simply transmit or
create sound, but constantly rewrite it, including a continual rewriting of the very
technologies of recording and displacement. Record players were taken apart and
reconstructed as towering 'record-schaschlik's' where the pick-up could be moved at will
across the vertical and horizontal axes of the construction. Magnetic tape (with sound
recordings) were glued on the wall in criss-crossing patterns. Listening by means of the loose
soundhead of a tape recorder, one would trace a sound m a p of a wall terrain.
It is a cartography of sound, in fact, in which sound is submitted to the dimensionality of
concrete space and distance, well removed from its non-dimensional location in the air/ear.
Sound traces new dimensions and distances. Magnetic tape is no longer just a recording strip
passing quickly over a soundhead in order to let sounds escape from it. It is itself a trajectory,
a piece of concrete space and distance through which one has to m a k e one's way at will and
from all possible directions. At this point one can even see the contours of a close relationship
between Paiks treatment of sound and Brecht's use of scale. The collapse of sound into space
makes for the imaginary expansions or shifts equal to those that go from cracks in the wall to
canyons. Paik's Symphony for 20 Rooms, in which sound events are defined in terms of
twenty different rooms of a house, elaborates exactly these sonic/spatial measures.
This collapsing of sound into space m a y in fact be an indicator of Paik's critical
engagement with the possibility of immersion. But at this point the sonic actions of Paik
might be interpreted in terms of the concept of voice. The voice is a specification of sound in
general, but simultaneously it complicates the notion of immersion in listening. Sound may
erode the bodily limits, but the voice provides us with a more salient experience of a presence
that is simultaneously coming from the inside and delivered from the outside. Regis Durand
has written of the mobility of the voice, no doubt inspired by its new importance in the age of
audio media where it produces instant intimacy and proximity, as well as reinforcing
experiences of distance. A s it cuts across the boundaries of reality and representation (a vocal
sample has no less presence than 'the real thing'), the voice is an 'apparatus' in the sense that
it produces and transforms of its o w n accord.53 Just as the voice m a y be something produced
by the body, the product of a source, it is also a piece of residue, something that falls outside,
B O R E D O M A N D OBLIVION 79
that continues on its own. This fact of the voice as something that falls outside your own
bodily space or 'life' was Antonin Artaud's supreme dilemma. Artaud's enemy was dead
matter: the fear that your output is what you put out, that your voice moves to freeze the
moment you let it escape into speech, sound, writing. H e suspected that no turn of a phrase,
no shape of an object, no track of a movement can constitute a life of its own, but is doomed
to fall to the ground, limp as a discarded garment or excrement. The dead or residual
character of the voice was dangerous for the reason that the separation from your own voice
entails yourself as 'dead' or 'residual'. His only prescription against this sort of death was a
vision of totality in which voice and body would be indivisible. A n d this vision of totality,
where the symbolic language of 'society' must dissolve into a scream or 'noise' is parallel to
many such totalising fantasies within the different avant-garde positions - from Yves Klein's
tout to Cage's zero.
In contrast, Paik is sceptical about totality and not afraid of residue. 'We should learn
how to be satisfied with 7 5 % , how to be satisfied with 5 0 % , h o w to be satisfied with 3 8 %
...', he writes in his preface to his Exposition of Experimental Television. A n d just a few lines
below, he makes it very hard for anybody (including himself) to approach Zen Buddhism as
just an interesting philosophical framework for a new and total artistic or musical vision:
'Zen is responsible of Asian poverty. H o w can I justify Z E N without justifying Asian
poverty?? It is another problem to which I will refer again in the next essay' [sic] Then he
asserts: 'The frustration remains as the frustration. There is N O catharsis.' From this point of
view Paik may even take a special interest in the residual aspect of the voice. H e picks up
what Artaud leaves aside and interprets it as productive. It is this residual and productive
aspect of the voice as apparatus that Paik explores when he continually rebuilds technology
in terms of its o w n site or terrain. More particularly this means that he explores the capacity
of the voice for creating not only presence, but also a split in presence. As in reverberation or
feedback this split creates excesses and noise that will surround meaning, but not replace it.
Paik redefines sound in terms of loop or feedback in order to produce all the immersive
characteristics of a voice. One work for instance demonstrates a record-player where the arm
that supports the pick-up is replaced by a phallic object extended into the listener's mouth.
The strongly erotic implications of this image of sonic/oral 'penetration' notwithstanding, the
work also creates the image of an impossible 'listening through the mouth' where the sound
returns by strange splits and warps to its source. The sound has become a voice. N o w it can
no longer be 'music' - something for the ear, something to which one simply listens. Cage
praised the capacity to listen above all other faculties - he imagined an opening of the ear
which would make one receptive to the 'excellence' of the world. For Cage, listening becomes
a metaphor for receptiveness in general, not only the aural kind But by having listening
literally make a detour through one of the orifices that (unlike the ear) not only receives but
also discharges, it is as if Paik wants to 'dirty' the clean neutrality of Cage's receptiveness.
Paik generally went to considerable lengths to displace this listening in terms of its silent
'other', notably sex. Not content to rest on the metaphorical plane of the sensual (this is, after
all, Western music's way of sublimating the sexual experience), Paik used its rather more
blunt backstreet forms of expression, such as striptease or penis-length contests.54 W h e n the
'arm' of the record-player becomes a sexual organ, he seems to point out that one is receptive
only by risking exchange and interpenetration, which also means leaving one's own mark.
80 I N A B L O M
For whether the voice in question is mine or yours, or someone else's whose n a m e remains
unknown, these essentially social questions of ownership, propriety, recognition, territori-
ality and identity frame every m o m e n t of its being. A s the composer Earle Brown notes with
respect to one of Paik's early Cologne actions: 'A Paik is a Paik becoming a Paik (by any
other name) [...] Yes Virgil, there is an avant-guard.'55 A n 'avant-guard' - keeping a watch
on the borders that pop up as if out of nothing.
REPETITION
As Paik creates voices by returning sounds or sound-technologies on themselves, he moves
into another minefield - notably that of repetition. It was a field that Cage himself had been
threading with a certain care and m a n y explanations and exceptions. Repetition must - in
principle - not occur: to Cage repetition above all denotes repetition of the norm, and his
work is, to the contrary, devoted to the possibility of change. Yet Cage is, of course, aware
of the paradoxes and complications surrounding repetition, and of the way in which its
concept inevitably surrounds his o w n concept of change. The rule of discontinuity in
repetition - the fact that in order to be repeated an object must first have disappeared -
actually gives a unique kind of singularity and momentary presence to the repeated
object.56 For this reason Cage claims that on one level 'repetition does not exist [...] and we
cannot think either that things are being repeated, or that they are not being repeated.'57
A n d about the experience of actually performing the 840 repetitive passages of Satie's
Vexations, he asserts that the piece became interesting not at the point of the beat (which is
the element that sticks to the most rigid form of repetition), but at the point of the phrase,
where one could experience variation.58 A n d so Cage is in one sense able to do away with
the problem of repetition for the benefit of change. Beyond repetition, there is always
change.
With this in mind, the way in which so m a n y of the artists connected to Fluxus are unable
to leave well alone but actually return to repetition over and over again is strange - even
slightly uncanny. Because this return to repetition is often blunt, defiant, extremely
determinate and unsophisticated. It seems to exist at the simple level of a beat or a single
extended signal, as if they initially wanted to scar or mark the notion of change or
indeterminacy itself. Paik had already pointed out that indeterminacy in composing and
performing was still nothing but a stretch of linear time for the listener (attempts to 'solve'
this problem by playing the same piece twice in one performance so that the listener could
savour the difference, would not change anything in principle). With this insight they seem to
return indeterminacy with a vengeance to the very linearity that it was supposed to escape,
and with boredom as a main frame of reference. For the repetitive pieces form the very
paradigm for what Dick Higgins called 'super boredom'.
One piece in particular seems to have produced a whole lot of 'frustration with N O
catharsis', with a few legendary and contested performances.59 In Yes It Was Still There. An
Opera (1959), Emmett Williams - a centralfigurein the concrete-poetry movement - used a
radical repetition of sounds and graphic marks as he subjected a simple little 'erotic mystery
story' to infinite dispersal or attenuation.60 An Opera is, like any opera, a story that illustrates
itself in terms of both sound and vision. But in this case the illustration immediately
BOREDOM A N D OBLIVION 81
challenges or even destroys the story or 'libretto' - not by overturning its meaning, but by
subjecting it to so m a n y elements of temporal or graphic repetitions that the story gets 'lost'
in the process. But then the libretto also deals with the question of loss: the story of a lost
letter. Or, to be more precise - a lost part of a letter, notably the purely graphic dot over the i.
The young m a n w h o has 'lost the dot over the f gets help in searching from a young w o m a n ,
but while the dot remains lost and absent (in the hero's mouth, incidentally), its graphic
presence increases with every word uttered by the main character. For on the actual score his
words are held apart with ever-increasing distances by a m a d proliferation of graphic dots -
one for each new word. In that way, thefirstword uttered by the m a n is followed by one dot,
while word number 179 is followed by 179 dots... and so on. Visually, the score develops as
a spiralling structure of depletion as the distances between the words increase with every dot,
since dots are also, a m o n g other things, the graphic sign used to indicate pauses.
In the performance of the score, however - that is, in its realisation as an 'opera', the
depletion of the libretto is mediated by a different kind of 'presence'. The story stretches
towards the infinite as the dots are 'represented' by even beats (on a drum, a cup, a table or
whatever). The beats m a y be empty structural markers just like the graphic dot that signifies
nothing more than simple pauses or the difference between capital and lower case i. But a
performance of these beats takes around three hours, and of course the experience will be
that of an eternal repetitive pounding, minimally interspersed by single words and sentences.
Then, what might atfirstappear as a neat little paradox on absence and presence - the ever-
increasing presence of the lost object - turns into a different kind of structure and a different
kind of experience. The structure of absence/presence is displaced by repetition. The libretto
may be lost in its o w n beat, but this repetitive drumming also evokes a different dynamic
which has to do with mutation or transformation.
For repetition is the mark of the structure of pattern rather than the structure of absence
or presence.61 The logic of pattern m a y be explained by comparing computers to typewriters:
A typewriter produces the presence of a single letter from a single key, while pressing one key
on the keyboard of a computer produces chains of reactions and transformations, chains of
codes where pattern and randomness interact. A n d so pattern indicates that information is
never present in itself- it is dependent on the probability distribution of the coding elements
rather than a presence. Pattern can be recognised through redundancy or repetition of
elements, and one of its more crucial features is the tendency towards unexpected
metamorphoses, attenuations and dispersals because of the long chains of reactions.
A specific type of single c o m m a n d works leading to endless processes of repetition and
attentuation, as if initiated by a computer key, actually becomes a crucial feature in Fluxus.
This was - at least partly - thanks to the influence of the composer La M o n t e Young, w h o
edited what was to become thefirstFluxus publication, notably the special issue of Beatitude
West magazine, named An Anthology. Y o u n g seemed to reverse all of Cage's principles: N o
longer based on chance operations, his pieces appeared fiercely determinate. N o longer
pieced together as an assemblage of autonomous and heterogeneous multiplicities, they
seemed to depart from a single sound, sentence, instruction orfigure,m a n y of them distinctly
extra-musical. O n e significant piece even explored the extremes of linearity: Composition #10
I960 simply instructs one to 'draw a straight line and follow it.' Composition #71960 likewise
explores the sound of a single interval (afifth)to be held for a long - indeterminately long -
82 I N A B L O M
time. Yet, like someone pressing one key on the computer, Y o u n g seemed obsessed with the
possibility of producing unforeseeable effects through a single c o m m a n d H e professed an
interest in newness:
Often I hear somebody say that the most important thing - about a work of art is not
that it be new but that it be - good. But if we define good as what we like, which is the
only definition of good Ifinduseful when discussing - art, and then say that we -
are interested in what is good, it seems to m e that we will always be interested in
the same things (that is, the same things that we already like).
I a m not interested in good; I a m interested in new, even - if this includes the possibility
of its being evil.62
For Young, as for Higgins, the new or the indeterminate is framed by the possibility of
danger or evil. This concern with danger essentially deals with the potential for immersion.
Unlike Cage, Y o u n g did not primarily conceive of a sound as a 'being' - an individual among
individuals in a big network structure - but as a 'world': 'If one can give up part of himself to
the sound and approach the sound as a sound and enter the world of the sound, then the
experience need not stop there but m a y be continued much further and the only limits are the
limits each individual sets for himself. W h e n w e go into the world of a sound, it is new.' He
had been searching out such worlds of sound since early age: wind, crickets, sounds of
animals in a wood resonating off a lake, the humming of power stations, telephone poles and
motors.64 The repetition of endless identical moments in his single c o m m a n d compositions
operate in terms of pattern: N o element is present simply in and of itself, referring only to
itself. Each repetition of a sound or a phrase carries within it the traces of its previous
manifestations, but also announces its difference from these. It is essentially a generative
movement instigated by the effect of differences when experienced in time: the spacing of the
different elements in the play of traces and differences indicates an endless number of
possible permutations. Draw a straight line ... was, on one occasion, issued as a booklet, wi
the composition instruction written along the middle of every page with new dates of
execution/composition as the only changing elements: each day is a mutation of the previous
one. The linear movement of the piece through the pages of the book told a story of
repetition and transformation through one single figure.65
The recognition of the dynamics of pattern in these works m a y give a more precise idea of
h o w the super-boring repetition of the pieces creates 'worlds' for immersion. N Katherine
Hayles is concerned with pattern in the context of changing experiences of embodiment in a
V R context, but her model of thought m a y throw some light on the implications of repetition
and mutation in the single c o m m a n d works.66 For a world of immersion to exist, the subject
must step into it by simultaneously stepping out of itself. But while this idea m a y bring up
notions of zen blankness, it actually indicates a specific kind of connectedness. The arm that
presses the single c o m m a n d key on the computer belongs to a body and a subject that is then
both part of the transformations taking place with the operations of pattern in the machine,
while also being outside of it. In a text written for his Symphony for 20 Rooms, Paik develops
a theory of immersion, which departs from a specific notion of individuality. Variability must
be combined with intensity: the problem, as Paik sees it, consists in having variation without
loosing intensity. The pure quantity of nature - Cage's endless variability - must, according
to Paik, be undercut by 'quality'. By this he does not mean quality as in 'good, better, best'
BOREDOM A N D OBLIVION 83
SIGNATURES
One of the most blunt and insistent instances of repetition even seemed to recall the very
space that Cage had gone to so m u c h trouble to avoid: notably the space of the subject. It
was a strange, even perverse, kind of invasion: the free-playing non-subjective space of
Cagean multiplicity was interrupted by a series of work that seemed, above all, to scream /,/,/
(in French, moi, je).
84 INA B L O M
This was the repetitive strategy of Ben Vautier, whose most important statement from the
late 50s onwards is Moi, Ben.je signe or /, Ben, sign. A n d right from the start these statements
or instances of signature go to work, in paradoxical and often tormented ways, with the
previous avant-garde formulations of totality or limitlessness, from Marcel D u c h a m p to
John Cage and Yves Klein. Thefirstm o m e n t in Ben's strategy comes when he discovers the
fundamental duplicity of these notions of totality. If Duchamp's ready-mades, Cage's
indeterminacy or Klein's notion of tout means that art opens up into anything, the reverse
side of this possibility is the principle of appropriation: D u c h a m p , Cage and Klein
appropriate anything for art, in the n a m e of art or the personal signature. Appropriation is all
about ownership, and yet in this instance ownership or signature is what must remain hidden:
it is effectively dissolved into 'multiplicity' or carried off into the image of heavenly blue
endlessness. The artist w h o appropriates is also the instance that is supposed to disappear.
Because of this duplicity Ben sees no other choice but to go to work with the way in which
this duplicity circumvents and interrupts the notion of the total.
For, on the one hand, there is no doubt that Ben follows both Cage and Klein in believing
that new spaces can be found, must be found, and that a notion of limitlessness - of unlimited
possibility - is fundamental to this search for the new. But to Ben this notion of totality
remains narrowly 'artistic' and idealised so long as the appropriating and egoistic space of art
itself is not taken into account, as long as the egotism of this space must be kept silent when
everything else is supposed to sound A n d so Ben administers a return of the repressed. He
starts to sign all over again, continually and mariiacally. H e signs the space of free play set up
by John Cage, and it is in fact by signing it that he marks it off as a particular space, with
particular limits. H e is scribbling all over this territory like some kind of m a d graffiti artist,
taking it all for himself. Graffiti is basically about signature - about a forbidden signature:
signing a space that is not yours, stealing a bit of the space for yourself. It has a tendency to
take place in what is generally and idealistically k n o w n as 'public spaces', but by overwriting
or signing these spaces the graffiti artist reopens the question of territorial ownership and
boundaries: to w h o m do these spaces really belong? Ben's action is in m a n y ways similar. The
forbidden signature evokes a hidden or repressed signature in John Cage's free space. It also
repeats, as if dumbstruck, the signature actions of D u c h a m p , but with a difference. Ben's
signature no longer guarantees anything for art, as Duchamp's did, but (since it is so bluntly
and obviously a repetition) turns back on itself in order to expose the limits and borders that
were, by some strange occlusion, being kept out of the picture by Duchamp's followers.
These are, a m o n g other things, the limits and borders of the thing called 'ego', which plays
such a central, if often misunderstood, role in the work of Ben. For, contrary to a widely held
belief, Ben's work is not about a return to expressionism, not about a return to the
communication of the inner depths of the soul or psyche. The ego in Ben's work is an
exemplary space in that it is an object that seems to consist entirely of limits. F r o m the outset
his analysis of the art situation takes him right back to the limits of his o w n ego. His analysis
starts out with an I - an I that is 'worried and in doubt' ('Je reste inquiet et dans la doute)
The limits of the ego are those of aggression and desire, of jealousy and ambition, and it is
fundamentally formed through its relation to death: T a m jealous, I want to do what has not
been done. I'm afraid of not making it. I want it all. I'm the only one. I cry at night. I hate the
others. I create it all. I sign it all. I a m G o d Creator, Ben.'71
B O R E D O M A N D OBLIVION 85
This anxiety and ambition, pointed out in an almost obsessive manner, is important
because it disrupts the comfort of the standard avant-garde notions of totality. W h e n
Klein, for instance, conceives of his totality in terms of the infinite blue sky, Ben punctuates
this idea by Saying, very bluntly, that contrary to Klein his personal notion of totality has
always been death. For Ben this means that since the notion of art and the desire to create
cannot be separated from the anxieties of the ego, a proposition of totality that wants to
surpass the workings of the ego and art can only do so by taking these factors into account,
by working its way through them. A n y other position is based on delusion, since such
totalities (or notions of unlimited possibilities) are in fact limited by what they exclude.
And so Ben drives a wedge into the earlier avant-garde acts of appropriation by working
through the question of the signature itself. Ben had already assumed the principle of
intention that informs Duchamp's artistic revolution (the fact that anything can be art if the
artist intends it to). But by assuming and repeating it he also discloses its other side, so that
intention is now rewritten in terms of the far more uncomfortable and egoistic notion of
pretention: 'Je pourfais tout faire, car j'en ai la pretention' (T can do anything because of m y
ambition to do it').72
By working through the limits of the ego and its pretentions, Ben necessarily stumbles
across a number of paradoxes and contradictions. But these contradictions turn out to be the
very core of Ben's notion of creation. The most significant Of these contradictions have to do
with the question of the new - the possibility of creating new spaces - since the desire for the
new is fundamentally linked to personal ambition, creating a space for one's own signature.
Some of the funniest but also most heartbreaking moments in Ben's work are the instances
where he seems to wonder what space is left for him When the concept of totality has already
been claimed by so many other artists. Their (supposedly non-personal) concept of totality
hurts or invades his (entirely personal) desire for a space of expression! Ben is perfectly aware
that it is the egoistic desire for the new that lies behind his hurting, but on the other hand
some notion of the new is absolutely fundamental to any attempts at surpassing a certain
(artistic) culture, and its very particular grip on notions such as egp and intention.
And so Ben's way of dealing with this paradox is to introduce the new in terms of two
notions that would initially seem to be antithetical to it. H e defines the new in terms of
repetition on the one hand, and absences on the other. H e plays with and confuses the very
slight differences which the French language sets up between du nouveau (the new) and de
nouveau (once again).73 Since Klein had already signed totality or 'all' (le tout), Ben can think
of nothing else to do but to repeat this act of signature by signing totality all over again.
Ben's most typical statement is notably T sign all' ('/e signe tout'). But in this repetition there
is necessarily a displacement of the stakes involved in signing. Whereas Klein signs all, Ben
signs all, which is an entirely different thing. Klein's act remains on the level of propositions
or intentions, whereas with Ben the material physical presence of his signature or
handwriting is all important.
And Ben's handwriting is virtually everywhere, spreading across every available surface
with tremendous pretention and gusto. Klein's signature is a gesture of generalised
appropriation, Ben's physical signature returns to the level of particularia, demonstrating,
mark by mark, space by space, how one invests, particularly, in the possibility of the world.
But the world or 'totality' will not be conquered: for every space covered by Ben's
86 INA B L O M
handwriting one is reminded of all the millions of spaces into which his handwriting does not
reach. Ben's point is precisely that the world will resist total appropriation of possibility -
possibility or the new can only reside in contradictions or in multiplicities that will not
cooperate 'peacefully'. These contradictions are fundamental. For instance, since the new is
'only' repetition, Ben claims to work precisely in the space of its contradictions or lack of
positive characteristics.74 His m a n y elaborations on holes or hollows is one notable way in
which he pays tribute to this vision of absences, as is the w a y in which he chooses to play with
the contradictions or lacks in the given 'avant-garde' spaces.
But in fact the space of the signature itself is also a contradiction par excellence. O n the one
hand, it is the physical mark of a particular body, the guarantor of the ego, of personality and
intention. O n the other hand it undercuts all of these things. A s Jacques Derrida insists, it is a
written mark, designed to work precisely in the absence of the body or ego that has produced it.
It is an original mark, an event produced by a singular person, and yet w e recognise it as a
signature only because it has been and m a y be repeated ad infinitum75 The effect of the
signature is then an intertwining of singularity and repeatability: its repetition displaces the
singular subject (or Ben's ego) as a mere effect of the signature. The signature then has to do
with excess: it traces the material frame or 'body' of the subject, while producing the subject as
an effect that exceeds this signing body. It is at once a guarantor of subjective limits while
producing the subject as a something that is too much, something that has 'seeped out',
demonstrating the hollowness of the inside and the permeability of limits. The signature is, in
other words, a double-bind mechanism that also instigates the 'death' of this subject. Hence
Ben's emphasis on the interconnectedness of death and totality. This is not a 'totalising' notion
of death, but simply a way of expressing the most critical feature of the signature. For Ben, the
necessity of working through the space of the signature comes from the w a y in which it plays
with and at the limits of otherness. The signature is the space of Ben's ego, but it is also the
space of its repetition in 'other' terms, the space of the ego's oblivion. In Ben's work the endless
repetition of the signature works to deplete the limits of the ego and its intentions. It pushes the
ego to its limits (passing through pretention and desire on its way) - and then beyond A s the
artists assembled under the n a m e of Fluxus rework the terms of immersion, it is precisely
through a thinking that takes into account the boundaries towards alterity and the critical and
often painful contradictions that must remain within any concept of multiplicity. There is no
boredom, no letting go of boundaries, without danger following suit.
ego by working with and through it, Flynt seems to suggest a similar depletion of the concept
of art. Only he goes about it through a slight detour. B y 1961 Flynt felt 'swindled' by both
Cage and Stockhausen when he felt that their efforts led right back to the paradigm of
Western art music, with no real room for the experiences of the black-, folk- and pop musics
from his native American South.78 A n d so, Henry Flynt's major preoccupation seems to have
been various militant attempts to formulate ways of moving beyond the bourgeois institution
of art. But his essay throws a different light on an attitude that might, at times, have seemed
like a simple anti-art activism. For in Implications - Concept Art Version of Coloured Sheet
Music No.l - a piece developed to accompany Flynt's essay as a sort of demonstration of its
implications - revolutionary energy and meaning is in fact deflated by paratactic strategies of
dispersal and emptying out. In a comment on the piece, Flynt claimed that 'its point was to
proclaim the speciousness of syntactical categories of identifications' - m u c h along the line of
argument developed in 'Concept Art'.79 In a seemingly paradoxical m o v e Flynt propagated
an art that would be based on both concepts and structure, but only after having emptied
those terms of some usual assumptions: the notion of a logical connection between a name
and its intension and the notion of structure as an organising factor that would be integral to
some musical or artistic content. Structures and concepts could become artistic elements on
their own, in their emptied-out, non-syntactical forms, Flynt claimed.
What Flynt is essentially promoting, then, is a sort of radical unrelatedness or dispersion.
Following this strategy, his Implication creates 'axioms', 'statements' and the like, but he
immediately subjects these axioms and statements to a process of folding and dispersing. In
fact what he creates is a series of surfaces which reproduce one another in crystalline
processes of movement and freezing. The 'axiom' that starts the process is a sheet of cheap
white typewriter paper which will be soaked in inflammable liquid, then burned on a
rectangular fireproof surface so as to create a rectangle of ashes the same size as the sheet.
The rectangle of ashes will next be photographed in white light, and in a way that makes it
coincide exactly with the frame of thefilm.The negative of this film will then be melted and
cooled in a mould to form a doubly convex lens with small curvature; with this lens one will
take a colour photograph of the ashes rectangle in different yellow light. A new lens will be
made of this new negative, in order to take new photographs with this lens in red and blue
light. These newest negatives will be melted in a mould with the ashes which have been
photographed to create a new lens, with this lens a black-and-white photograph of the white
ashless surface is made. Yet another lens is m a d e from this last negative, while a negative is
made from the lens used in the last photograph. F r o m this new negative and new lens two
prints will be m a d e in an enlarger - an enlargement and a reduction.
The piece, in other words, deals with surfaces and sameness: against the identifying
distinctions of concepts and structures, the piece creates one continuum of disappearance and
oblivion from the assumed difference between reality and recording. This is highlighted by
his use of photography. A s a medium of documentation photography is particularly devoted
to the question of memory, but here its m e m o r y recording is gradually depleted. First of all,
the ashes that are to be photographed could be seen as 'already' photographic, since both
ashes and photographs are indexes or traces, m e m o r y objects of a specific kind Reality and
recording are parts of the same. In the process that follows, the m e m o r y contained in each
single recording is immediately caught by oblivion, as each new photograph or m e m o r y
88 INA B L O M
record 'selflessly' serves as the recording apparatus for yet another memory. In this process,
the boundary that separates m e m o r y from oblivion can no longer be kept distinct.
The strategy implied in this and other works s o m e h o w implements Flynt's ambivalence
and vagueness of formulation when he tries to m o v e around the art/anti-art dilemma. He
invents alternative formulations, such as 'veramusement' and, later on, 'brend' (a
contraction of the former), but he still depends on the word 'art' both for definitions
and for marking his resistance. Flynt clearly sees this dilemma. A n d so it seems increasingly
apparent that his work to deplete the meaning of 'concepts' and 'structures' in general has
implications for the particular concept of art through a sort of metonymical affiliation. By
emptying concept and structure of meaningful, value-bound affiliations while keeping the
terms intact, he seems to have been able to do with them what he could not do to the word
'art' because of the enormous institutional weight that would m a k e any counter-
formulation too squarely 'dialectical'. O n e of his m a n y attempts at alternative terms was
'act' - acognitive culture. A s a positive term it might not work, but his Implication shows
the significance of the 'acognitive' as a practical strategy in relation to the concept of art:
the choice to simply empty it out, to subject it to processes of oblivion - circumventing the
issue by dispersing and displacing it.
NOTES
1 Dick Higgins, 'Boredom and Danger', Something Else Newsletter (Dec 1968). The essay
was originally written in the summer of 1966.
2 O n the subject of art and immersion, I a m indebted to interesting exchanges with the
artist and writer Joseph Nechvatal.
3 '... it's memory that one has to become free of, at the same time that you have to take
advantage of it. It's very paradoxical.' John Cage quoted in Richard Kostelanetz,
Conversing with Cage, N e w York, 1988, p 209.
4 'Everything is permitted if zero is taken as the basis. That's the part that isn't often
understood. If you're nonintentional, then everything is permitted. If you're intentional,
for instance if you want to murder someone, then it's not permitted. The same thing can
be true musically.' Ibid, p 208.
5 See n 4.
6 Dick Higgins, 'Intermedia', The Something Else Newsletter, (Feb 1966).
7 Ina Blom, 'The Intermedia Dynamic: A n Aspect of Fluxus', Dissertation, University of
Oslo, 1993.
8 Higgins, 'Boredom and Danger'.
9 Ibid. The piece was originally by George Brecht; John Cage, however, suggested that it
should be done in darkness,
10 Higgins, notes to St Joan of Beaurevoir, 'What Part Does a Witness to St Joan of
Beaurevoir Play?'. In the Silverman Collection, Detroit and N e w York.
11 Higgins,'Boredom and Danger'.
12 Dick Higgins, Contribution 1, November 1959.
13 Higgins, 'Boredom and Danger'.
14 Ibid.
15 M a c L o w quoted in Emmett Williams, ed, Poesie Etcetera Americaine, Paris, Centre
Americain 1963. Translation mine.
16 'What constitutes the originality of speech, what distinguishes it from every other
element of signification is that its substance seems to be purely temporal. A n d this
B O R E D O M A N D OBLIVION 89
temporality does not unfold a sense that would itself be nontemporal, even before
expressed, sense is through and through temporal.' Jacques Derrida, Speech and
Phenomena, trans David B Allison, Evanston, 1973, p 83.
17 Benjamin H D Buchloh, Broodthaers: Writings, Interviews, Photographs, Cambridge,
1988, p 77.
18 La Monte Young, ed, An Anthology, N e w York, Jackson M a c L o w and La Monte
Young, 1963.1 take it as an indication of the centrality of the piece that M a c L o w chose
to publish it in this groundbreaking collection of works.
19 Brecht, Notebooks II, p 65.
20 Brecht quoted in Henry Martin, Introduction to George Brecht's Book of the Tumbler on
Fire, Milan Multhipla Edizioni, 1978, p 106.
21 N Katherine Hayles gives a very clear account of the principle of independent but
intersecting causal chains in her essay on chance operations in John Cage's music. In
Perloff and Junkerman, John Cage: Composed in America, Chicago, 1994, p 232.
22 Brecht, Notebooks III, p 52.
23 George Brecht and Robert Watts, 'Yam Lecture - Oakland Version', 1962. Hand-
written document. In the Archiv Sohm s Staatsgalerie Stuttgart.
24 Brecht, Exercise. From 'Water Yam', 1963.
25 Grilles Deleuze, The Fold: Leibniz and the Baroque, London, 1993, pp 5-7.
26 Ibid., p 19.
27 Ibid., p 77.
28 Robert Smithson, The Writings of Robert Smithson, ed Nancy Holt, N e w York, 1979,
p 112.
29 Brecht, 'Water Yam', 1963.
30 The three last works referred to are Untitled (1973), Untitled (1965) and Untitled (1971),
reproduced in Martin, Introduction, pp 243, 248 and 240 respectively.
31 Deleuze, The Fold, pp 20-22.
32 George Brecht, 'Towards Events', leaflet, 1959.
33 A series of work from 1976/77 are based on crystals in connection with small objects
and mirrors. Crystals are also mentioned in a number of other contexts.
34 The three map-pieces are reproduced in Martin, Introduction, pp 220, 219 and 184
respectively.
35 This is the point of view expressed by Martin in Introduction, p 34.
36 Deleuze, The Fold, p 31.
37 Brecht, as quoted in Martin, Introduction, p 32.
38 Frances Dyson, 'When Is the Ear Pierced,' in Moser and MacLeod, eds, Immersed in
Technology, London, 1996.
39 Douglas Kahn, 'Track Organology', in October 55, Boston, M I T Press, 1990, pp 67-78.
40 The Cage classes are described at length in Al Hansen, A Primer of happenings and
Time/Space Art, N e w York, Something Else Press, 1965.
41 Dick Higgins to George Brecht, 26 January 1960. In the Archiv Sohm, Staatsgalerie
Stuttgart.
42 From a 1963 interview with Gottfried Michael Koenig, in Wulf Herzogenrath, ed, Nam
June Paik: Werke, 1946-1976, Cologne, 1977, p 51.
43 N a m June Paik, Post Music: The Monthly Review of the University for A vant-garde
Hinduism. Printed leaflet, Fluxus edition, 1963.
44 Ibid.
45 Ibid.
46 Ibid.
47 Ibid.
48 John Cage, A Year from Monday, London, 1985, p 74.
49 N a m June Paik, Exposition of Music-Electronic Television, leaflet, 1963. Paik attributes
90 INA B L O M
this last insight to K O Gotz, w h o had pointed out to him that electronic images were
productive, that is, indeterminate, not reproductive.
50 Ibid.
51 Ibid.
52 Paik, Exposition of Music-Electronic TWev/s/on.Translation from the G e r m a n mine.
53 Regis Durand, 'The Disposition of the Voice' in Benamou and Caramello, eds,
Performance in Postmodern Culture, Wisconsin, 1977, pp 99-110.
54 Paik's sexual works include Serenade for Alison (a striptease work). Young Penis
Symphony, TV Bra for Living Sculpture and Chroma-Key Bra, TV Penis and Opera
Sextronique (another striptease piece, which led to the arrest of cellist Charlotte
M o o r m a n in N e w York in 1967).
55 La Monte Young, ed, An Anthology.
56 Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, trans Paul Patton, London, 1994, p 70.
57 Cage quoted in Kostelanetz, p 222.
58 Ibid., p 47.
59 'There have been, to m y knowledge, onlyfiveperformances, three of which led to acts of
violence.' Emmett Williams, My Life in Flux and Vice Versa, Stuttgart 1991, p 101.
60 Ibid.
61 For this interpretation of pattern as opposed to presence/absence, I rely on N Katherine
Hayles' essay 'Virtual Bodies and Flickering Signifiers', in October 66, Cambridge, 1993,
pp 69-92.
62 La Monte Young, Lecture 1960; reprinted in Tulane Drama Review, vol 10, no. 2
(Winter, 1965).
63 Ibid., pp 81-2.
64 Interview with La Monte Young, N e w York, 1988.
65 It is important to emphasise the continuity between the conception of a world or worlds
for immersion in Fluxus and the creation of such world(s) in recent club culture (techno,
ambient, jungle, etc) Whereas, with Fluxus, it was pigeonholed in terms of the 'avant-
garde' or the 'experimental', it is n o w a broad social phenomenon.
66 Hayles, p. 91.
67 'One forgets as quickly as children do. Stockhausen's new term " M o m e n t " seems to me
to be of strong importance in this connection.' Paik, T o the Symphony for 20 Rooms', in
Young, ed, An Anthology.
68 Jackson M a c Low, Tree Movie, Score, 1961. Published in ccV TRE Fluxus Newspaper
1, N e w York, 1964.
69 Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, p 18.
70 Ben Vautier, 'Manifeste I960', in En Rouge: Textes theoriques. Tracts, Milan, 1975, p 1
71 Ben Vautier, statement after his participation at the Misfits Fair in London, 1962, where
he lived exposed in a shop window for two weeks. Published in Hanns S o h m and Harald
Szeeman, eds, Happenings and Fluxus, Cologne Kunstverein, 1970.
72 Ben Vautier, Le Happening, 1966; reprinted in Charles Dreyfus, ed, Happening and
Fluxus, Paris, 1989, p 178.
73 For instance, Vautier, En Rouge, pp 41 and 34.
74 Ibid., p 35.
75 Derrida, 'Signature, Event, Context, in Margins of Philosophy, Chicago, 1982, pp 307-30.
76 Printed in La Monte Young, ed, An Anthology, second edition, N e w York 1970. In the 1963
edition, the same piece carried the title Transformations'. The last version (Implications)
then underscores the connection between the 'Concept Art' essay and the work.
77 Brecht, quoted in Martin, Introduction, p 117.
78 Seen 61.
79 Henry Flynt, Fragments and Reconstructions from a Destroyed Oeuvre, 1959-1963, N e w
York, Backworks, 1982, p 8.
DAVID T DORIS:
ZEN VAUDEVILLE:
A MEDI(T)ATION IN THE MARGINS OF FLUXUS1
PRE-FACE
In the history of the arts of the twentieth century Fluxus stands as a singularly strange
phenomenon. It resembled an art movement and was inadvertently named as such in 1962.2
Yet unlike other art movements, Fluxus produced no signed manifestos indicating the
intentions of its participants, who, indeed, could rarely agree on just what it was that
constituted the Fluxus programme. And, unlike other movements, Fluxus was not bound to a
specific geographical location. O n the contrary, Fluxus could well be seen as thefirsttruly
global avant-garde; the artists, composers, poets and others w h o contributed to the corpus of
Fluxus work hailed from France, West Germany, Japan, Korea, Czechoslovakia, Denmark,
and the United States. Quite a few lived their lives as expatriates or nomads.
Originally intended by George Maciunas (who is acknowledged as the principal organiser
and disseminator of Fluxus) to be the title of a magazine for Lithuanians living in N e w York
City,3 'Fluxus' soon became something quite radically different, coming to signify an
astonishingly broad range of practices in virtually every field of h u m a n communicative
endeavour. The work produced under, or in proximity of, the Fluxus flag includes films,
newspapers, books, performances, symphonies, sculptures, sound poetry, dances, feasts, one-
line jokes, insoluble puzzles, games - the list continues. However, it should be noted early on
that these descriptive categories are more often than not inadequate to the task of containing
Fluxus works, which, as I hope to demonstrate, operate in the margins between such
categories. A single score, for example K e n Friedman's 1965 work, Zen Is When:
A placement.
A fragment of time identified.
Brief choreography.
Yet Brecht suggests that Duchamp's use of chance in his work was 'not exhaustive', and
so acknowledges the importance of other modernist applications of chance: Jean Arp's
chance collages, M a x Ernst's 'decalcomania of chance' as well as his techniques of frottage,
the Surrealist cadavre exquis, and Tristan Tzara's chance poetry. In each of these cases, the
artist relinquishes, to a greater or lesser degree, the power to determine the form of a work,
serving instead as a functionary, a facilitator of natural processes within a specific, limiting
context (a poem, a drawing, a collage). In this strain of practice, in the denial of artistic
choice and determinism in favour of the potency of apparently arbitrary natural processes,
Brecht perceives profound spiritual implications. These implications, Brecht points out, were
noted by the Dadaists themselves: 'The almost incredibly incisive mind of Tristan Tzara, as
early as 1922, even recognised the relationship of all this to Oriental philosophy (in one of the
most convincing of Dada documents, the "Lecture on Dada"): "Dada is not at all modern. It
is more in the nature of a return to an almost Buddhist religion of indifference.'"6
Tzara aspired to indifference, of course, and so he perceived a kinship in Buddhism's
evident coolness, its detachment from the world. I would suggest, however, that the Buddhist
'condition' is not one of indifference, but rather of a radical involvement with the world. This
condition, according to Buddhist texts, demandsfirstthat one's own preconceptions be
consciously cast aside - no easy task - in order that the things of this world be allowed to
manifest themselves as such, as they present themselves in their fullness of being. Neither
overwhelming nor unknowable, nature is thus revealed through simple, direct engagement in
its processes. Further, the operations of the individual are themselves revealed through
engagement in this unfolding; one becomes an actively perceiving, infinitely mutable organ of
response, not differentiated from nature. Brecht quotes Daisetz Suzuki's discussion of the
role of nature as a paradigm for human action in Zen Buddhism: 'Nature never deliberates; it
acts directly out of its own heart, whatever this may mean. In this respect Nature is divine. Its
"irrationality" transcends human doubts or ambiguities, and in our submitting to it, or
rather accepting it, we transcend ourselves.'7 This acceptance, notes Suzuki in his original
text, is itself a matter of choice:
The artists of Fluxus were committed to the acceptance and the investigation of nature's
'musts', choosing in many cases to relinquish artistic control in favour of participation in,
assimilation of, and identification with the processes of nature. Both Zen and Fluxus embody
principles that entail a restructuring, and even ultimately an elimination, of the supposed
boundaries between 'life' and 'art', between T and 'other'. In this article I will examine
certain aspects of Zen that resonate within some Fluxus performance, and which offer an
alternative critical vocabulary, a provisional framework within which one can allow some
aspects of Fluxus to be revealed.
This article came about, as many do, in an attempt to satisfy a curiosity. After establishing
an initial connection with Fluxus material, I noticed that critics and even Fluxus artists
would make the observation, now and again, that Fluxus was somehow like Zen, that Fluxus
94 DAVID T DORIS
works were similar in some respects to Zen works or Zen koans. Unfortunately, no one has
ever chosen to examine this observation in any significant detail. H o w and w h y is it the case
that Fluxus works so often bring Zen to mind? O n the one hand, there is Fluxus: the name of
a loosely organised group of contemporary artists (and non-artists) w h o were examining, in
the most radical ways, the limits of what constitutes 'art'. O n the other hand, there is Zen: the
name of a centuries-old, non-theistic religion whose practitioners examine, in the most
radical ways, the limits of what constitutes 'consciousness'. T w o distinctly different
explorations of the limits of what defines us as human, true, but w h y even mention them
in the same breath? A n d supposing there is some connection between the two, why the
attendant critical silence?
At thefirstpass, it seemed to m e that both Zen and Fluxus were excruciatingly difficult to
explain: somehow, no matter what words came to mind, they never appeared to be adequate
to the task at hand; important details of the experience - including m y experience - of both
Zen and Fluxus invariably escaped exposition. Contradictions arose within each set of
practices which systematically frustrated attempts to say anything definitive about either.
After some time, and considerably more frustration, it became clear that m y o w n difficulties
in bringing about some sort of closure, some sort of totalising definition, were the result of
the very pretensions which Fluxus and Zen perpetually mock. Words, to paraphrase a Zen
adage, are so m a n y fingers pointing to the Fluxmoon, and are not to be confused with the
Fluxmoon itself. O r as Dick Higgins points out: 'We can talk about a thing, but we cannot
talk a thing. It is always something else.'9
This 'something else' is what the artists of Fluxus, like the practitioners of Zen, have
sought to interrogate. What the two hold in c o m m o n is an insistent attitude of questioning: a
revelation of the codes by which we come to frame the world, by which w e come to receive
the world as given and immutable. This questioning, unfolding through demonstration rather
than discourse, indicates a cognitive shift away from the modernist understanding of the self
as the inviolate centre of being. Both Fluxus and Zen investigate the nebulous realms
between conceptual categories: between subject and object, between vision and hearing,
between high and low. The Fluxus artist Eric Andersen has said:
The reason intermedia is called intermedia and not multimedia is that it falls between
categories ... Every time it seems to take a direction or form a shape, something
happens that just takes it out of it again. And Zen is doing the same number. It is falling
between categories. This is one of the basic secrets of Zen.10
Brecht; no matter what one might think about it, 'there is someone associated with Fluxus
who agrees with you.'12 The contrary of this statement is also true: there is someone
associated with Fluxus w h o disagrees with you.
THE EVENT
Throughout this century there has been a strain of art that has sought to eliminate the
perceived boundaries between art and life. Contemporary chroniclers of the art scene of the
early 1960s, as well as the artists themselves, were well aware of their predecessors in similar
pursuits. Unlike, say, the Futurists of an earlier era, w h o saw themselves as a new breed,
determined to liberate themselves from the weight of history and inherited cultural baggage,
intermedia artists of the early 1960s were only too happy to point out antecedents for their
work, as if to stake out their o w n place within an alternative lineage of artistic production, a
marginalised history that stood outside and against the mainstream.
Fluxus was a group of nominally kindred spirits w h o together and separately surveyed the
peripheral territories of their respective disciplines, or rather the margins between those
disciplines. The new structures that resulted from these explorations tested received notions
of the limits of the arts, as well as the limits of our ability to perceive those structures as art.
George Maciunas staked out the historical parameters of these territorial researches with
a zeal bordering on the maniacal. Trained in architecture, graphic design and art history,
Maciunas had a considerable attraction to structure and order; he has been described as 'an
obsessive/compulsive personality that accumulated, hoarded, classified, and dissected'.13 H e
was also a fan of thefilmcomedian Buster Keaton and of Spike Jones the bandleader whose
parodies of popular and classical music - incorporating the sounds of pots and pans, car-
horns, gunshots and kazoos - fused the boundaries between music and slapstick comedy.
Maciunas' art-historical essays took the form of charts: painstakingly drawn evolutionary
diagrams of the newest occurrences in the arts (those new occurrences, that is, that were of
interest to Maciunas). Perhaps the largest of these charts is his Diagram of Historical
Development of Fluxus and Other 4 Dimensional, Aural, Optic, Olfactory, Epithelial and
Tactile Art Forms (Incomplete), in which respects are paid to Futurist Theatre, Marcel
Duchamp, Surrealism, Dada, Walt Disney spectacles, Byzantine iconoclasm, the Japanese
Gutai Group, vaudeville, Joseph Cornell, and much else - in short, a fairly broad spectrum of
historical traditions and isolated phenomena that have in c o m m o n a re-evaluation of
accepted notions of structure, both aesthetic and ontological.
Zen is not mentioned on this chart. N o r would one necessarily expect tofindit there. John
Cage, however, is. Indeed, the chart, says Maciunas, 'starts with what influenced Cage. Cage
is definitely the centralfigurein the chart.' In fact, he continues, 'you could call the whole
chart like "Travels of John Cage" like you could say "Travels of St. Paul", you know?
Wherever John Cage went he left a little John Cage group, which some admit, some not
admit his influence. But the fact is there, that those groups formed after his visits. It shows up
very clearly on the chart.'14
'The argument goes like this', says the poet Emmett Williams, w h o is justifiably critical of
the notion of a 'direct influence' of Zen on Fluxus:
96 DAVID T DORIS
John Cage was a student of Daisetsu T. Suzuki, the Japanese religious philosopher who
helped to make the Western world aware of the nature and importance of Zen. In turn,
many of the activists on the American Fluxus scene studied with Cage, w h o opened a
few of the Doors of Perception for them. Ergo: Fluxus has a direct connection with Zen.
It would be more accurate to say: Ergo: Fluxus has a direct connection with John
Cage. But Cage is an artist and a teacher, not a Zen missionary, w h o also 'studied' with
Schonberg, Duchamp and Buckminster Fuller. Besides, there has been for many years a
worldwide interest in Zen and other sects of Buddhism, and it would be surprising if
Fluxus artists, generally a well-informed and well-travelled lot, were not aware of these
disciplines, and of the value of meditation.
John Cage, though certainly 'not a Zen missionary', was one of the most important conduits
of Eastern thought to the Western world. A s if directly addressing Williams' concerns about
Cage's o w n role in the foundation of Fluxthought (but speaking of D a d a rather than
Fluxus), Cage notes: 'It is possible to m a k e a connection between the two, but neither Dada
nor Zen is a fixed tangible. They change; and in quite different ways in different places and
times, they invigorate action.'16
It was in large part through the activities and pedagogy of John Cage that both Dada and
Zen came to invigorate action during the late 1950s. A s Williams points out, Cage studied
chess with D u c h a m p for a time and was attracted in no small measure by the Utopian thought
of Fuller and the formal purity of Schonberg's music. A n d indeed, Cage attended lectures by
Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki at Columbia University from 1949 to 1951. Suzuki's thought played a
great role in the formation of Cage's o w n production; Suzuki's teachings, he felt, enabled him
to regard music 'not as a communication from the artist to an audience, but rather as an
activity of sounds in which the artist found a way to let sounds be themselves'.17 As a vehicle
of signification, this approach could 'open the minds of the people w h o m a d e them or
listened to them to other possibilities than they had previously considered ... T o widen their
experience; particularly to undermine the making of value-judgements.'18
In 1952 Cage had explored the opening of the mind to other possibilities in a piece entitled
4'33", in which the pianist, David Tudor, sat at a piano and did nothing except indicate the
beginning and end of each of the three movements by shutting and lifting the piano's lid.
During the piece itself, no sound is intentionally produced by the pianist on the instrument.
Four minutes and thirty-three seconds of distinctly musical silence: Cage, a composer of
music, has imposed as a framework a measure of time and declared that whatever incidental
sound occurs within this framework is a piece of music. With Cage came the notion that
duration, sound and silence, rather than harmony, rhythm and melody, are the foundation
blocks upon which musical experience is structured. With no melodic or harmonic passages
to lead the listener through time, Cage's music ceases to function as narrative, but rather
places the listener in the vertically structured space of synchrony - this moment in time. And
time, as w e have come to k n o w it in this century, is interdependent with space.
It was the notion of opening to possibilities that Cage brought with him to the
International S u m m e r Course for N e w Music in Darmstadt (1958), and which he shared with
his classes in 'Experimental Composition' at the N e w School for Social Research (1956 -
1960). Numbered a m o n g the participants at Darmstadt were La Monte Y o u n g and N a m
June Paik (Emmett Williams was also living in Darmstadt at this time). A m o n g those who
attended the N e w School classes, with varying degrees of regularity, were Dick Higgins, Al
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 97
Hansen, Allan Kaprow, Toshi Ichiyanagi, George Brecht and Jackson M a c L o w (Brecht and
M a c L o w had been invited to sit in by Cage), all of w h o m were to play pivotal roles in the
development of intermedia.
Cage's students were introduced to his understanding of music as time-space, and
formulated their o w n methods for exploring these uncharted waters. O n the one hand,
students like Allan Kaprow and Al Hansen were impressed by the Cage/Dada notion of the
'simultaneous presentation of unrelated events' and went on to create happenings - complex,
multi-sensory constructions - what Fluxus artist T o m a s Schmit called 'the expressionistic,
symbolistic, voluminous opera-type-of-thing' - such as Kaprow's 1959 18 Happenings in 6
Parts}9
O n the other hand, George Brecht - for w h o m the Cage class was in part 'a kind of
confirmation' of 'the thought of Suzuki that I'd already discovered on m y own' 20 - was not
so inclined to construct as to notice: 'Composers, performers and auditors of music permit
sound-experiences by arranging situations having sound as an aspect. But the theatre is well
lit. I cough; the seat cracks, and I can feel the vibration. Since there is no distraction, why
choose sound as a c o m m o n aspect?'21 Brecht claimed to be 'increasingly dissatisfied with an
emphasis on the purely aural qualities of a situation', and so began to call his work, even his
object-oriented work, 'Events'. This word, he claims, 'seemed closer to describing the total,
multi-sensory experience I was interested in than any other .. .'22 Rather than examining the
extravagance and multi-sensory barrage that constituted many happenings, Brecht's work
was 'very private, like little enlightenments I wanted to communicate to m y friends w h o
would know what to do with them.'23
Three Telephone Events
• W h e n the telephone rings, it is
allowed to continue ringing, until it stops.
• W h e n the telephone rings, the receiver
is lifted, then replaced.
• W h e n the telephone rings, it is answered.
Performance note: Each event
comprises all occurrences
within its duration.
Spring, 1961
T don't take any credit for having written a score like telephone events', said Brecht in a
radio programme of M a y 1964. His role as 'writer', in this instance, is that of the scripting of
possibilities implicit in one's engagement with a ringing telephone. Brecht's addendum,
noting that 'Each event comprises all occurrences within its duration', informs the reader that
the three performance possibilities listed m a y in fact be three individual perceptions of a
single phenomenon. In contrast to the constructivist tendencies of the Happenings, in which
the ringing of a telephone becomes an aspect of a larger composition, Brecht isolates and
focuses on the single phenomenon, revealing the multiplicity within that singularity. For
Brecht, the 'act of imagination or perception is in itself an arrangement, so there is no
avoiding anyone making arrangements'. It is therefore also seen as unnecessary to develop
complex, polymorphic structures for presentation: a single telephone ringing provides
sufficiently fertile ground for performance possibilities. It is the interaction between the
percipient/performer and the object perceived that provides richness and diversity. Brecht's
98 DAVID T DORIS
'little enlightenments' are acts of quotidian simplicity which are presented and noticed, or vice
versa; indeed, Brecht declares, 'the occurrence that would be of most interest to m e would be
the little occurrences in the street .. .'"
While Brecht m a y have coined the term 'Event' to refer to his 'private little
enlightenments', he was by no means the only individual investigating the realm of
monostructural presentation. In 1960 L a M o n t e Y o u n g produced a series of'Compositions'
that built upon the ground of questioning opened up by John Cage's 4'33".
Composition #3 1960
Announce to the audience when the piece will
begin and end if there is a limit on duration.
It m a y be of any duration.
Then announce that everyone m a y do whatever
he wishes for the duration of the composition.
Similar in some respects to Cage's piece, principally in the use of duration as its limiting
aspect. Young's work, a musical 'composition', stretches the conception of performance by
eliminating the need for a specifically musical instrument and performer, employing instead
an 'announcer' to simply indicate the boundaries of the event. T h e audience thus become the
performers and are given complete freedom to act within the established confines of the
piece. While the work can still be understood as music, it is raw action and perception that
themselves become the stuff of the performance, outside the limitations of our understanding
of music as sound, silence and duration. In the following piece, Y o u n g questions the necessity
of determining duration within a work, and examines the notion of synaesthesia, of a
structured reversal or combination of perceptual acts, asking, 'Isn't it wonderful if someone
listens to something he is ordinarily supposed to look at?'25
Composition #5 1960
Turn a butterfly (or any number of butterflies) loose in the performance area.
W h e n the composition is over, be sure to allow the butterfly to fly away outside.
The composition m a y be any length, but if an unlimited amount of time is available, the
doors and windows m a y be opened before the butterfly is turned loose and the
composition m a y be consideredfinishedwhen the butterfly flies away.
The beating wings of a butterfly surely do produce sound - and can thus, by traditional
standards, be appreciated as music - but this sound is certainly beyond the range of normal
h u m a n perception. Fn such an extreme state, one becomes aware of the inability of a single
m o d e of perception, in this case hearing, to reveal the totality of an object as it presents itself.
The notion of a categorisation or isolation of the senses, and consequently of the specific arts
that are addressed to those isolated senses, comes under question. In order to understand an
object in its totality, the perceiver must herself be perceiving as a totality. In a commentary to
the sixteenth case of the Wumenguan (in Japanese, Mumonkan), a thirteenth-century
collection of koans, W u m e n asks his reader:
Does sound come to the ear, or does the ear go to sound? Even if echoes and silence are
both forgotten, when you reach this, h o w do you understand verbally? If you use your
ears to listen, it will be hard to understand; only when you hear sound through your
eyes will you be close.26
Hundreds of these event scores have been published over the past thirty years, and in m a n y
cases, they are all that remain of the events for which they served as the original impetus. T h e
events themselves - elegant, ephemeral monostructural gestures which m a y be performed
before an audience, alone or in a group, or in the mind - and the objects which are revealed
within their structures, unfold in a space to which words have limited access: this space is not
the space of language, nor of silence, but of being, or rather, becoming. Like Zen, Fluxus uses
language to force a confrontation with the inadequacies of language, and posits instead a
field of direct experience that eludes systematisation.
The earliest m o m e n t of Buddhist performance and its critical reception is the stuff of
legend. Shakyamuni, the historical B u d d h a (c560-480 B C E ) , after attaining enlightenment,
stood on top of the M o u n t of the Vultures to offer a sermon to his disciples. Saying nothing,
Shakyamuni held up a single golden lotus blossom before all those in attendance. His
disciples were baffled by this gesture, save for one Mahakasyapa, w h o simply smiled in
understanding. This circle of act and reception, the 'transmission of the lamp' of
enlightenment outside the constructs of the language of scripture, direct action with 'no
dependence on words and letters', c a m e to constitute an essential paradigm of Zen's method
and self-perception: Here it is - what is there to say?
The argument behind this method of disclosure, says Daisetz Suzuki, is simple, and quite
beautiful:
The idea of direct method appealed to by the masters is to get hold of this fleeting life as
it flees and not after it has flown. While it is fleeing, there is no time to recall memory or
to build ideas. N o reasoning avails here. Language m a y be used, but this has been
associated too long with ideation, and has lost direction or being by itself. A s soon as
words are used, they express meaning, reasoning; they represent something not
belonging to themselves; they have no direct connection with life, except being a faint
echo or image of something that is no longer here."
There is nothing mystical about this, really: a communication of what is true can certainly be
expressed or contained in words - words themselves are dharmas, manifestations of reality -
100 DAVID T DORIS
Yet the words that constitute this language are not themselves the beliefs contained within
scripture, nor are they the eggs that were tossed about during the performance, and which I
a m still rinsing out of m y hair. A paradox thus presents itself. Language constitutes our
subjective experience of the world, yet this very subjectivity simultaneously prevents us from
experiencing the world in its suchness. D o we then discard language in order to gain access to
an authentic experience of the world?
Yes and no. Chuang-tzu, one of the founders of philosophical Taoism, an important
influence on the development of Zen in China, suggests that words be regarded as a net which
is employed to catchfish;this net (known in Japanese as sengyo) is required to perform a task,
but it is the fish themselves which are consumed: 'Words,' says Chuang-tzu, 'are there to
convey a profound meaning; we should keep the meaning and forget the words.'30 One must
cast one's net if one is to catch anyfishat all. One must also be wary of becoming entangled in
the net. Language must by necessity be employed as a tool, but in such a way that it will create
the conditions in which it is no longer useful, a void in which its o w n absence can be filled by
unmediated perception and direct action. The principal tool used by Rinzai Zen (one of the two
major schools of Zen) to accomplish this end is the technique of kanna Zen - literally 'Zen of
the contemplation of words'. The form of this contemplation is embodied in the koan.
The term 'koan' is derived from the Chinese kung-an, which originally signified 'a legal
case constituting a precedent'.31 Koans have been used as a systematic medium of training
since the eleventh century, when the students of Lin-Chi (Rinzai in Japanese) compiled the
discourses and sayings of their master into a single volume, the Rinzairoku*2 A koan may
take the form of a portion of a sutra, an episode from the life of one of the great masters of
the tradition, a mondo (a baffling dialogue between master and student), or a paradox; in
short, any form that will, through the use of words, ultimately engage the student in a direct
relationship with reality. Rather than being theoretical or discursive in nature, the
constitutive form of a given koan (question or statement and response) is an example of
its o w n teaching, codified in language. Ruth Fuller Sasaki points out:
The koan is not a conundrum to be solved by a nimble wit. It is not a verbal psychiatric
device for shocking the disintegrated ego of a student into some kind of stability. Nor,
in m y opinion, is it ever a paradoxical statement except to those who view it from the
outside. W h e n the koan is resolved it is realised to be a simple and clear statement made
from the state of consciousness which it has helped awaken.33
The beginning student, however, has no notion of this and struggles to seek an answer
founded in the codes of language itself; after all, it is language which constitutes her very
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 101
subjectivity. But h o w does one respond in language to a problem such as the familiar, classic
koan: 'What is the sound of one hand clapping?' Sitting on her solitary meditation cushion -
legs locked in the lotus position, spine straight, hands folded in mudra, eyes half-open,
breathing normally - the student begins to focus on the problem: one hand, the student m a y
think, makes no noise at all; indeed, two hands are required for clapping. Tentatively, she will
go to her roshi, or master, perhaps offering as a solution: 'The one hand makes no sound at
all.' The roshi will deny the validity of this answer in some fashion (he might even strike the
student, if this seems necessary, in order to bring the student into an immediate, incontestable
appreciation of this moment), and the student will return to her problem. Time and again,
she confronts the roshi with a solution, and time and again she is turned away. This state of
affairs breeds a considerable and mounting tension. After some time, the problem becomes
the single thought contained within the student's mind; there is room for nothing else.
Finally, the tension has to break.
The traditionally 'correct' response to the problem of the one hand is this: the student
thrusts her hand out toward the roshi and says nothing. Effectively, this is something akin to
saying, 'Here is the sound Listen.' (In response to certain koans, the roshi m a y himself be
slapped by the student, an appropriate gesture signifying, in part, the transcendence by the
student of the master-student power relationship). Here then is a severing of the hand, if you
would, and of the perceiving subject, from their linguistic correlatives. W h a t is being
presented is not 'one' hand clapping, and not 'two' (that is, not 'not-one'), but the sound
itself as such, beyond such a dualistic notion as 'one'/'not-one': just this act presencing, a fact
unfolding here before you. In short, an answer to a koan must be revealed experientially, as a
demonstration or an example of the very principle it embodies.
What do koans have to do with Fluxus? Victor Musgrave, whose Gallery O n e hosted the
1962 Festival of Misfits, notes: 'some of the Fluxus artists have ... produced significant
equivalents' to 'the bandaged, all-seeing ambiguities of [Zen's] marvelous koan.' H e asserts
that this is 'the most formidable task that Fluxus artists have attempted.'34 I agree. But h o w
do the artists of Fluxus engage this 'formidable task'? H o w are Fluxus works the 'significant
equivalents' of koans?
It is important to note that, according to Musgrave, an equivalence is seen not between
Fluxus work and Zen painting or haiku verse, but between Fluxus work and koans. Rather
than compare the work of Fluxus artists to the expressions of the specific sensibility that
accompanies Zen practice, Musgrave likens Fluxus events to the principal pedagogical tool of
Zen, the koan. The Fluxus work is not an index of the performer's relationship with his or
her materials, as the exquisite brushwork of a Zen painting traces the path of the scribe's
hand and presence of'no-mind'. Rather, the Fluxus work, like the koan, is the exposition of
the path itself, the restructuring and presentation of a process of meaning-production. The
form a work takes is the demonstration of the unfolding processes of its o w n presentation
and reception. Like the circular, stimulus/response form of the koan, Fluxus 'presentation',
to quote Dick Higgins, 'would always have to do somehow with the general principle that
ideas could be displayed or demonstrated rather than argued for or against.'35
102 DAVID T DORIS
NO-HAND
In 1976 Higgins formulated his 'Exemplativist Manifesto', in which he outlines the mutable
structures of what he terms exemplative work; that is, work in which 'the idea is developed
through its embodiment in the actual work, and thus the work is an instrument for conveying a
thought-and-feeling complex by implying a set of examples of it.'36 George Brecht describes
this notion as 'an expression of m a x i m u m meaning with a minimal image, that is, the
achievement of an art of multiple implications, through simple, even austere, means.'37
Exemplative work offers the audience/percipient/participant a construct of notation and
performance, 'an image of the set of possibilities intended by the artist'.38 T h e following snippet
of conversation between George Brecht and Irmeline Lebeer gives an indication of h o w one
might respond to a specific work, Piano Piece, for which the score reads simply 'centre':
Indeed, the performer of this work is faced with an object that is nearly tautological in its
apparent simplicity. Such a work cannot be regarded on its o w n merits - there is almost
nothing here to be regarded. This is a work with virtually no intrinsic merit, no form of its
own, n o qualities of which to speak. Rather, as Eco says, it is 'the focal point of a network of
limitless interrelations', and, as such, has an infinite potential number of possible realisations.
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 103
N o w , rather than argue for or against this (we will return to this notion later), here is
something the reader can do on his or her o w n that might help m a k e the issue clearer. It is a
piece by Fluxus artist Takehisa Kosugi called Chironomy 1 (chironomy, according to the
Oxford English Dictionary, is 'the art or science of moving the hands according to rule, as in
pantomime or oratory'). The text of the piece reads: 'Put out a hand from a window for a
long time.' According to this text, the only tools needed to perform the piece are a hand, a
window, and time (how m u c h time constitutes 'long time' is up to the performer). So choose a
window, choose a hand, decide on a length of time, and perform the piece. The discussion
will continue afterwards.
Like Watts' Winter Event, the written text of Kosugi's piece says very little: it presents a
simple image which offers nothing more than itself as proof, as baffling an injunction as it is
apparently meaningless. W h a t does it mean to 'put out a hand from a window for a long
time?' T o search for meaning in the written text as a closed, autonomous form is futile; there
is simply nothing there to explain and no clue to understanding. O n e must look elsewhere for
direction: Kosugi's text is a musical score; like any written musical score, one must perform
the piece, follow its instruction in real-time, in order that it m a y reveal itself as meaningful.
The hand serves as the focusing element, a meditative stasis around which the world
unfolds. During m y o w n private performance of Chironomy 7,42 I heard some yelling across
the way, and the cry of a baby. Cars passed on the street below, there was a rich aroma of
frying meatfloatingon the wind and the soft h u m of m y computer on the desk near by. After
quite a few minutes of maintaining the gesture, I felt a slight pain in m y forearm, a slow throb
that worked its way up to m y shoulder and the base of m y neck. In the face of this pain, I
became more determined to maintain the gesture, and soon it seemed clear that the piece, for
me, was no longer one of formal duration - that is, was no longer concerned with the simple
passing of time - but of endurance, of a body situated within a shifting, temporal network of
physical and mental phenomena; this network in turn was brought to light by the body's
situation within its structure, simultaneously inside and outside, revealed by the act of a
single gesture presencing. In m y performance of Chironomy 1, the gesturing hand - the
distinct object named in Kosugi's text and thus initially the primary focus of m y o w n
consciousness - could not be located as an object independent of its context.
Kosugi described his o w n experience of Chironomy 1 as follows:
I did one performance related to this piece in an outdoor space in Kyoto. There was an
outdoor stage, and there was an auditorium, and at the rear of the stage was a
backdrop, a wall and a door. I just slightly opened the door and put m y hand out. The
audience could only see m y hand The opening in the door was very narrow, so I
couldn't see the audience. So the outside space was so different; the hand was exposed
to the audience, and this part, m y body, was behind the wall, so I was very isolated.
Psychologically very strange.
Window, door, the same thing. It is the passage between in and out, so one can shut
the door, and make an inside and outside. Putting one part of the body through the
window, it becomes part of the outside - but the body is the inside - psychologically, it's
very unusual, very affecting to the consciousness. So this is a part of mine, and I'm
104 DAVID T DORIS
exposing a part of the inside into a part of the outside. A kind of feedback. This part of
m y body, the hand, is very m u c h a part of me. But if you expose it to the outside, and if
there's a barrier between the hand and the body, then the hand could be independent -
a little bit.
This side, m y inside, and the outside, are so different, but still they are the same. So
from the audience side, they can only see m y hand 1 cannot see m y hand But as a total
reality, they are the same thing. I have m y hand with m e , but I cannot see it. The
audience can see only m y hand, but they cannot see m y body. So, take this chair as an
example. M a y b e it has another part and it is exposed to another dimension, but we
cannot see it. But everything is together. O n the physical stage, it's just a chair.
A tactile experience, this piece. Eyes and ears are open; perhaps this makes the eyes
and ears more sensitive. But most important is the hand: the hand is an antenna. '
W h a t Kosugi has succeeded in creating is a wholly liminal state, a condition in which the
notions of 'interior' and 'exterior' have been reversed, andfinallyrevealed as inappropriate.
'In exemplative art', says Dick Higgins, 'the action is always between: it cannot take place
at any one pole without the conception of another. It is therefore, as af Klintberg put it:
Two Exercises
Consider an object. Call what is not the object 'other.'
EXERCISE: A d d to the object, from the 'other,' another
object, to form a new object and a new 'other.'
Repeat until there is no more 'other.'
EXERCISE: Take a part from the object and add it to the
'other,' to form a new object and a new 'other.'
Repeat until there is no more object.
In attempting to create a 'new object' from an 'object' and an 'other', it becomes clear that
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 105
the 'object' constitutes the 'other', and vice versa. 'What is "it"', says Chuang-tzu, 'is also the
"other", what is the "other" is also "it" ... Are there really It and Other? O r really no It and
Other?' This question is ultimately unanswerable. 'Therefore', says Chuang-tzu, 'the glitter of
glib debate is despised by the sage. T h e contrived "that's it" he does not use, but finds things
in their places as usual. It is this I call "throwing things open to the light" \46
This notion of 'finding things in their places as usual' proved attractive for m a n y of the
artists involved in Fluxus. For Brecht, it c a m e as something of a 'surprise' w h e n he 'learned
that George Maciunas in G e r m a n y and France, Cornelius Cardew and Robin Page in
England, Kosugi, Kubota, Shiomi in Japan, and others, had m a d e public realisations of the
pieces I had always waited to notice occurring' (my emphasis). 47 Brecht's Event scores - some
of them, that is - can be seen as little exercises in concentrated attention, indices of
phenomena yet to occur, virtual events waiting to be perceived or enacted. T h e participant in
such exercises herself resides in a condition of relaxed awareness, attentive to shifting details
in the poeticfield- or perhaps not. Either way, Brecht's Event scores serve to describe the
parameters in which this attention - or distraction - is practised.
ATTENTION
From the beginning intermedia was concerned with matters of noticing phenomena as they
occurred, requiring an act of attention by the participant in order for the work itself to be
realised. This posed a dramatic shift of roles for both artist and receiver. A s Dick Higgins
points out, the artist becomes the creator of a matrix, rather than a completed work; the role
of the receiver becomes that of a participant and collaborator.48 In effect, the receiver does
not merely finish a work, but creates it anew with each performance. This is a position of
considerable responsibility - a work can never be performed precisely the same w a y twice,
and so one must be attentive to the work's unique process of unfolding. Jackson M a c L o w , a
poet and co-editor of the seminal collection of the n e w arts, An Anthology (1961), has given
some attention to the practice of attention:
F r o m Zen I gathered the conviction that giving one's complete attention to any dharma
(perception, form, feeling, etc.) m a y lead to a direct insight into reality, and that such
insight can free us from suffering, which, as Buddhism teaches, pervades all sentient
existence. (Briefly, through this insight the world of suffering, or samsara, is revealed to
be basically the world of blissful awareness, or nirvana.) This way of perceiving is often
characterised in Buddhist literature as 'choiceless awareness' or 'bare attention.'
Being 'choicelessly aware' is perceiving phenomena - as far as possible - without
attachment and without bias. Artworks m a y facilitate this kind of perception by
presenting phenomena that are not chosen according to the tastes and predilections of
the artists w h o m a k e them. O n e way of doing this - though not the only way - is to
bring phenomena (including language) to the perceivers of the artworks by means of
chance operations or other relatively "nonegoic" methods in which the artist's tastes,
passions and predilections intervene m u c h less than when artworks are m a d e in other,
more traditional, ways. 4
In this passage, M a c L o w is concerned with the means of presenting, rather than with the
content of presentation. Choiceless awareness can be facilitated by processes in which the
participant, by 'perceiving p h e n o m e n a ... without attachment and without bias,' structures a
106 DAVID T DORIS
By meaningless work I simply mean work which does not make you money or
accomplish a conventional purpose. For instance putting wooden blocks from one box
to another, then putting the blocks back to the original box, back and forth, back and
forth etc., is afineexample of meaningless work. Or digging a hole, then covering it is
another example. Filing letters in afilingcabinet could be considered meaningless work,
only if one were not a secretary, and if one scattered thefileon the floor periodically so
that one didn't get any feeling of accomplishment ...
Meaningless work is potentially the most abstract, concrete, individual, foolish,
indeterminate, exactly determined, varied, important art-action-experience one can
undertake today. This concept is not a joke. Try some meaningless work in the privacy
of your own room. In fact, to be fully understood, meaningless work should be done
alone or else it becomes entertainment for others and the reaction or lack of reaction of
the art lover to the meaningless work cannot be honestly felt.
Meaningless work can contain all of the best qualities of old art forms such as
painting, writing etc. It can make you feel and think about yourself, the outside world,
morality, reality, unconsciousness, nature, history, time, philosophy, nothing at all,
politics, etc. without the limitations of the old art forms.50
D e Maria's 'Meaningless Work' is concerned specifically with process for its o w n sake.
While it opens up a space in which one can 'feel and think about yourself, the outside world',
such a result is a secondary function of the work. D e Maria's principal concern is that the
participant experience a complete engagement in the work-process, devoid of purpose. Such
engagement m a y be enacted in a condition of either directed attention or unfocused
distraction; the texture of the experience is inscribed within the parameters of this reception.
The work itself offers no reward - the receiver will draw from the work what meaning he will.
Dick Higgins enjoys this sort of activity for just this reason: 'The nature of purposelessness
interests m e very much', he says. 'It is a great source of mental refreshment to do something
for no particular reason, especially when it is not interesting or refreshing. O n e simply
becomes conscious of nothing in particular. That phenomenon is implicit in a lot of m y
work.'51
The phenomenon is also present in much of the work of Ken Friedman, whose Scrub
Piece -firstperformed in 1956, when Friedman was six years old - stands as something of a
paradigmatic piece of meaningless work:
Scrub Piece
O n thefirstday of Spring,
go unannounced to a public monument.
Clean it thoroughly.52
From one perspective, the notion of meaningless work, 'work which does not make you
money or accomplish a conventional purpose', is an ironic commentary on the traditional
role of the artist as a 'bohemian' producer of autonomous, transcendental, 'useless' objects.
Indeed, George Maciunas believed Fluxus to be an intermediate step on the way to a total
dissolution of art. In art's stead, he posited concretism and anti-art. The merit of the concrete
artist, says Maciunas, "consists in creating a concept or method by which form can be created
independently of him.'53 Maciunas' anti-art is concerned with dismantling the pretensions
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 107
that accompany the notion of the artist. It is 'directed against art as a profession, against the
artificial separation of a performer from audience, or creator and spectator, or life and art: it
is against the artificial forms or patterns or methods of art itself; it is against the
purposefulness, formfulness and meaningfulness of art.' For Maciunas, 'Fluxus should
become a way of life not a profession ... Fluxus people must obtain their "art" experience
from everyday experiences, eating, working, etc.'54 A n d even further:
Anti-art is life, is nature, is true reality - it is one and all. Rainfall is anti-art, a babble of
a crowd is anti-art, a flight of a butterfly, or movements of microbes is anti-art. They
are as beautiful and as worth to be aware of as art itself. If m a n could experience the
world, the concrete world surrounding him, (from mathematical ideas to physical
matter) in the same way he experiences art, there would be no need for art, artists and
similar 'nonproductive' elements.55
For Maciunas, 'anti-art', like nature, is ultimately the most complete sort of aesthetic
experience, for it is presented without aesthetic intention; like rainfall, it just happens.
Purposelessness - attentive engagement in a task simply in order to be engaged in engaging in
a task - is thus a singularly radical conflation of the praxes of 'art' and 'life': any.one can do
it. Yet as Jackson M a c L o w points out, this purposelessness indeed becomes a purpose when
it is employed to specifically political ends - that is, when 'works such as ours are considered
merely tools with which to do away with art and artists. There m a y be, as some critics express
it, "an anti-art m o m e n t " in such works, but this is subsumed in an immanently oppositional
art with widened horizons.' A s M a c L o w sees it, 'the aesthetic of most artists associated with
Fluxus is and always has been nearer to [John Cage's] "opening to the world" aesthetic than
to Maciunas' anti-art position'.56
MAKING A SALAD
Alison Knowles created situations of delicate, even mysterious, elegance in m u c h of her early
work. Her simplest and perhaps best-known work, Proposition, wasfirstperformed on 21
October 1962 at the Institute for Contemporary Arts in London: 5 7
M a k e a salad.
This quality of emptiness, says Knowles, is brought about through action performed 'exactly,
precisely and modestly'. She notes: That's why Zen is mentioned in terms of Fluxus event
performing. The action is directed and precise with nothing added.'60
By adhering to a strict procedure, by bracketing 'artistic' intention and simply making a
salad, the performer allows that action to come to presence as such, unfolding in a space
between states of being art or non-art. The making of Knowles' salad - or your salad, or mine
- is a narration of the condition of liminality itself, the disruption of the frames of reference
in which the act of making a salad occurs: making a salad is not art, yet it is not simply
making a salad. A n d of course, it is both.
JUST SITTING
The central practice of Zen is sitting meditation, or zazen. In Soto Zen, the second of
major schools, the use of koan has been virtually eliminated, and practical procedure has
been minimised to this practice, 'just sitting' - a practice that one can apply when engaged in
more complicated actions, such as making a salad, dripping, or playing baseball with a fruit.
The act of sitting is perceived as a 'dynamic stillness' - one sits in a rigorously prescribed
posture, unmoving, yet constituted by interior processes in constant motion: the heart beats,
blood courses through its vessels, air enters and is expelled from the lungs, the stomach
churns away at its food ...
In Robert Filliou's Yes - an action poem, performed on 8 February 1965 at N e w York's
Cafe au Go-Go, 6 1 Alison Knowles described in encyclopaedic detail the physiological
workings of the bodily functions of'the poet'. The text of this portion of the performance is
divided into sections entitled: 'Of the Necessity of Alimentation' (eg - 'Once his food is
chewed, the poet swallows it, and it passes d o w n the gullet [or "oesophagus"] into the
stomach of the poet.'); 'The Blood of the Poet' ('As to quantity, blood constitutesfiveto
seven per cent of the body weight of the poet.'); T h e Poet's Breathing', T h e Excretion of
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 109
the Poet' ('Under a microscope, one can see that the kidney contains many small tubules,
whichfilteroff waste material from his blood.'); T h e Brain of the Poet' and 'Reproduction
and Senses of the Adult Male Poet'. A s Knowles read this rather elaborate treatise, Filliou
'sat cross-legged upstage, motionless and silent'. A s Knowles finished her description,
Filliou the poet rose to his feet and recited Part T w o of the poem, which consisted of the
following:
Yes.
As m y name is Filliou, the title of the poem is:
LE FILLIOU I D E A L
It is an action poem and I a m going to perform it.
Its score is:
not deciding
not choosing
not wanting
not owning
aware of self
wide awake
SITTING Q U I E T L Y ,
DOING NOTHING
Having actually already performed his score, sitting quietly and doing nothing during the
preceding enumeration of his body's facticity, Filliou affirms his presence as body with a
simple, resounding 'Yes'. H e states his name, another fact. Filliou then proceeds to address
mind, listing the qualities of a mind in an 'ideal' state (at least from Filliou's perspective), a
mind 'aware of [it]self as a unity, before, or rather with no regard for, the dualistic notions
inherent in the acts of deciding (yes/no), choosing (between this/that), wanting and owning
(that 'out there', as opposed to what is already 'in here'). T h e mind is 'wide awake', but
utterly receptive.
The body of the poet is demonstrated as a realm of supremely complex dynamism, of
manifold facts and disclosures. Its systems are engaged in day-to-day processes that are taken
for granted but which, physiologically, constitute the poet's self as a living, breathing,
bleeding, shitting entity. Even the skin of the poet is itself a process, h o m e to 'sensitive nerve
endings which tell him when, what and w h o m he is touching'. For Filliou, what unifies these
disparate processes is not the enveloping sheath of skin, but the very act of 'sitting quietly,
doing nothing'. This engagement with the world is a condition of concentrated, active
dissociation from the h u m a n tendency to systematise and classify, to construct dualities. It
forms the core and the strength of Filliou's work. It is 'better', he says, 'to accept all the
possibilities in advance, and accepting them always, to remain beyond that region where
everything is parcelled out, and everybody is owned by what he owns'. This is the Filliou
ideal, 'the absolute secret I took from soto Zen tradition'.62 It is this same condition, this
same ideal, that in Buddhism is k n o w n as samadhi.
One day in school, while I was performing our improvisational music. I got tired of
loud and rich sounds. I started tossing a bunch of keys to the ceiling to make an
ostinato. with its faint sound A n d while I kept doing it. I began to look at m y
performance objectively as a whole, and I noticed that I was performing an action of
tossing keys, not playing keys to make sound This was the turning point, when I
became concerned with action music or events.
Takehisa Kosugi elaborates on this transformation, the expansion of the sphere of music:
The sound object is not always music, but action, action. Sometimes no sound, just
action. Opening a window is a beautiful action, even if there's no sound It's part of the
performance. For m e that was very important, opening m y eves and ears to combining
the non-musical part and the musical part of action. In m y concerts, music became this
totality, so even if there was no sound I said it was music. Confusing. This is how 1
opened m y eyes to chaos.*0
Kosugi's 'confusion' about music as a totality was in fact a redefinition of the terms that
music to perception by the ears alone - indeed, as Kosugi points out. his questioning of these
terms as 'musical' is an opening of the eves to chaos. Kosugi's explorations of this chaos
resulted in works that examine the nature of breathing:
Organic Music
Breath by oneself or have something breathed
for the number of times which you have decided
at the performance.
Each number must contain breath - in - hold - out.
Instruments m a y be used incidentally.
walking:
Theatre Music
Keep walking intently.
Like George Brecht's event scores. Kosugi's work can certainly be seen as a series of'littl
enlightenments.' revelatory examinations of c o m m o n minutiae. In Music for a Revolution.
perhaps Kosugi's most memorable event score, the process of 'enlightenment', of throwing
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 111
things open to the light - opening the eyes to chaos - is simultaneously a descent into the
gruesome darkness of not-knowing:
This is music, says Kosugi: music for a revolution in perception, a revolution in consciousness:
Politically at that time there were many movements in Japan and the world. People
wanted some kind of social revolution, but of course it was not realistic, changing
society. A n d I thought changing, revolution, should be done by individual people,
revolutions in consciousness. Dada and Surrealism - these offered imaginative, logical,
practical, artistic approaches for seeing inside. O f course art activity in itself is a seeing-
inside, a reflection from in and out, a feedback. So revolution should be done inside
first. A n d yoga was a kind of training for me, like Zen, which is about self-revolution.
This is one part of m y thinking: self-revolution.
A n d then I met the awful, beautiful but awful, magical images of the Luis Bunuel
film Un chien andalou. Y o u k n o w the image: cutting the eye with the razor. A n d it
was so shocking, but the total film image was so gorgeous. It's a daytime dream.
Cutting the eye, taking only the visual function. A s an allegory it means w e open our
eyes to an unopened part of existence. So shocking, but such a strong message to our
consciousness. This image is so cruel, it was hateful to me. But I took that message
and brought that image into m y o w n work. Scooping out eyes. Before opening eyes,
there's a stage of consciousness of normal eyes. Beyond that, w e have another
consciousness. M y idea was to open consciousness.
Kosugi points out that Music for a Revolution 'marked a sort of conceptual shift in m y music.
Seeing and hearing are the same thing. Opening a door became a part of music, as a function
of performance. While you listen to the sound, you can see the sky ... it's a combination. So I
thought, this combination is music. Normally music means for ears, sounds. But for m y
concerts, music became m u c h bigger, not limited. This is a kind of confusion'.67
The confusion of this transformative shift in perception elicited by both Music for a
Revolution and the eye-slashing scene of Un chien andalou is echoed in the work of other
Fluxus associates. Daniel Spoerri created Lunettes noires, or Fakir's Spectacles (1964), a
pair of eyeglasses with needles extending inward from each of the lenses. Clearly indebted
to M a n Ray's Cadeau (1921) - a clothes iron that has been studded with nails, rendering it
not merely useless but counter-productive to its initial intention, Spoerri's spectacles create
a terrifying paradox: this tool, originally intended to correct a dysfunction of vision, will
n o w destroy the eyes. Other Fluxus work that explores the transformative power of sensory
deprivation and deterritorialisation include Ay-O's Black Hole (1990), a permanent
installation in the basement of the Emily Harvey Gallery in N e w Y o r k - bereft of vision,
one must work one's w a y through a lightless passage, relying solely on a single handrail for
guidance; and Ben Patterson's Tour (1963), in which a group of participants are blindfolded
and led through the streets of a city (like m u c h of Patterson's work, Tour is an inquiry into
the realm of interpersonal communication, particularly the limits of trust). In these works,
one is denied the naturalised primacy of (and the consequent dependence upon) the visual
frame, and so one must restructure one's apparatus for positioning oneself in the world,
reconstitute and reframe the world within the expandedfieldof the entire sensorium, or, as
Patterson's Tour indicates, within the network of social relations.
112 DAVID T DORIS
1) Having determined to perform the piece, the performer has five years in
which to anticipate the removal of thefirsteye.
2) Single-eyed after a period offiveyears, the performer necessarily undergoes a
period of adjustment; having just lost the sense of visual depth, the
performer's other senses - particularly that of hearing, the seat of balance -
become more acute, compensating for the loss.
3) Blackness. After ten years, all that remain are the senses of hearing, touch,
taste and smell, as well as the m e m o r y of sight. The adjustment continues,
and becomes complete.
Y o u should 'gouge out' your eyes and see nothing at all - after that there will be nothing
you don't see; only then can it be called seeing ... Y o u should "block off your ears and
hear nothing at all - after that there will be nothing you don't hear; only then can it be
called hearing ... Y o u should 'knock off your nose and not distinguish smells - after
that there will be none you cannot distinguish; only then can it be called smelling ... You
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 113
should 'pull out' your tongue, so that the world is silent - after that your ebullience will
be uninterrupted; only then can it be called speaking ... Y o u should 'slough off the
physical elements and be completely independent - after that you manifest forms
adapting to various types; only then can it be called person ... Y o u should permanently
stop clinging thought, so the incalculable ages are empty - after that arising and
vanishing continue unceasing; only then can it be called consciousness.7
extravagance of Happenings, she assumes and prescribes the role of the ascetic: T think it is
nice to abandon what you have as m u c h as possible, as m a n y mental possessions as the
physical ones, as they clutter your mind It is nice to maintain poverty of environment,
sound, thinking and belief. It is nice to keep oneself small, like a grain of rice, instead of
expanding. M a k e yourself dispensable, like paper. See little, hear little, and think little."
Lighting Piece
Light a match and watch
till it goes out.
- y.o. 1965 autumn
O n o asks: 'After unblocking one's mind, by dispensing with visual, auditory, and kinetic
perceptions, what will c o m e out of us? Will there be anything? I wonder'. A key aspect of
Ono's work is her desire to dispense with sensory stimuli altogether, creating works which
seek to focus the participant's attention on a solitary idea or perception. Possessing little,
dispensable as paper, concerned with ostensibly insignificant details of experience, the
participant stands in direct confrontation with Western traditions of accumulation, reason
and utility. N o w there is only this match, burning for n o practical purpose. It lights no
cigarette, destroys no property, starts n o cookingfire- yet potentially it m a y perform any of
these functions. The match simply consumes itself, leaving only ash behind T h e only object,
says O n o , is the image of the match that has been constructed in the mind
The spiritual intention of this sort of monostructural presentation is m a d e explicit in
Ono's work, and it is echoed to varying degree in the work of her Fluxus compatriots. Her
outspoken asceticism reminds one that the role of the ascetic in history has traditionally been
that of the revolutionary: one need only think of Siddhartha G o t a m a , Saint Francis of Assisi
or M a t a t m a Gandhi. N o w , while it is not m y intention to nominate O n o , or any other Fluxus
artist, for sainthood, it should be recognised that the assumption of such an ascetic posture
was in effect conceived as a powerful revolutionary tool during this period, a denial of the
material surplus and icy logic that, in two brief flashes, had m a d e possible the deaths of
thousands upon thousands of Japanese during the s u m m e r of 1945. A s Ben Patterson has
pointed out:
Perhaps the one thing everyone forgets or represses is that I, and m y generation of
Fluxus artists, were all more or less twelve to fourteen years old when thefirstatomic
b o m b exploded and left its mark on civilisation. Perhaps only Zen or existentialism
could begin to deal with such finality .. ,74
It is clear from reading Ono's T o the Wesleyan People' - which seems to function as her
manifesto - that she was quite compelled by Z e n thought. 'If m y music seems to require
physical silence,' she says, 'that is because it requires concentration to yourself - and this
requires inner silence which m a y lead to outer silence as well. I think of m y music more as a
practice (gyo) than a music' Gyo is a technical term derived from Zen; expressed more fully,
the term is Gyo-fu-za-ga. Translated literally, this means 'practice-walking-sitting-lying',
suggesting that one should maintain Zen practice during all activities of daily life.75 It is bare,
undivided attention, the very sort of attention that O n o seems to require in her Lighting
Piece, a work of music-as-practice - a practice of complete awareness of a single dharma, an
object coming to presence in the fullness of its being, outside the frameworks imposed
by utility.
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 115
Ono's metaphysics is clearly indebted to the more hermetic, intuitive aspects of Zen. In
'To the Wesleyan People', Ono quotes two Zen poems. One is by Shen-hsiu, who was a
contender for the role of sixth patriarch of Zen, and who went on to establish the Northern
school of Zen, noted for its gradual approach to enlightenment and its reliance upon
intellectual understanding of the sutras:
The other poem, a response to that of Shen-hsiu, is by Hui-neng, who rose from th
monastery cook to that of the sixth patriarch as a result of this response. Hui-neng's brand of
Zen, the Southern school, stressed an intuitive leap into the immediacy of experience, apart
from any intellectual understanding. This method is one in which a radical doubt is shed on
the stability and isolability of the object:
It is with Hui-neng that Ono has the greatest affinity. In an undated work, she seems to
pay homage to the sixth patriarch:
Wind Piece
Make a way for the wind
This wasfirstperformed in 1962 at the Sogetsu Art Centre, Tokyo, with a huge electric
fan on the stage. In 1966 at Wesleyan University, Connecticut, the audience was asked
to move their chairs a little and make a narrow aisle for the wind to pass through. No
wind was created with special means.
As part of the score itself, Ono describes two distinctly different performances; one in
which the wind was created by a 'huge electric fan', and the other in which 'no wind was
created with special means'. In the latter performance, was there a wind at all? W h y does Ono
need to mention specific examples of performances? In the following koan, the twenty-ninth
case of the Wumenguan, Hui-neng addresses the problem of wind in a language that is - at
least in translation - remarkable in its similarity to Ono's own rhetorical style:
Once when the wind was whipping the banner of a temple, the Sixth Patriarch of Zen
witnessed two monks debating about it. One said the banner was moving, one said the
wind was moving.
They argued back and forth without attaining the principle, so the Patriarch said,
'This is not the movement of the wind, nor the movement of the banner; it is the
movement of your minds.'
The two monks were both awestruck.77
Zen master Hotetsu was using a fan. A m o n k asked him about this: T h e nature of wind
is eternal and all-pervasive - w h y then do you use a fan?' The master said, 'You only
know the nature of wind is eternal, but do not yet k n o w the principle of its
omniscience.' The m o n k asked, 'What is the principle of its omniscience?' The master
just fanned. The m o n k bowed. 78
The 'principle of omniscience' of which Hotetsu speaks is simply wind itself; the act of fanning
is the demonstration of that principle, rather than a theoretical, verbal explication of such.
Meaning is conveyed by direct engagement, uncodified, manifesting itself in a space that pre-
exists language. The content of the expression is the expression of the content. Fanning is an
example or embodiment of wind, or rather of wind-ing, an action, a becoming that won't stand
still long enough for one to apply the grid of language. T h e wind is what one does.
Yet, if this sheds any light on Ono's use of a fan to create wind for her performance at the
Sogetsu Art Centre, h o w does it explain the performance at Wesleyan in which 'no wind was
created with special means'? Clearly, at an indoor performance there will be n o perceptible
wind of which to speak. W h e r e is the m o v e m e n t of the wind? A s Hui-neng points out, it is no
different than the movement of the mind O n o seems to concur, declaring, 'my interest is
mainly "painting to construct in your head'":
In your head, for instance, it is possible for a straight line to exist - not as a segment of a
curve but as a straight line. Also, a line can be straight, curved and something else at the
same time. A dot can exist as a 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, dimensional object all at the same time or
at various times in different combinations as you wish to perceive. The movement of the
molecule can be continuum and discontinuum at the same time. It can be with color
and/or without. There is no visual object that does not exist in comparison to or
simultaneously with other objects, but these characteristics can be eliminated if you
wish. A sunset can go on for days. Y o u can eat up all the clouds in the sky.
In short, the mind, as O n o perceives it, is able to simultaneously embrace contraries, can
reconcile the poles of dualities - dualities that exist only as constructs of language. This is
also the perception of Zen, as it is of m a n y mystical traditions, both Eastern and Western
('Eastern'?/'Western'?). A n d , as O n o suggests, it is the case in contemporary physics, where,
for example, light is simultaneously conceived as wave ('continuum') and particle
('discontinuum'). This, at last, is the realm of non-sense, the bottom line of both physics
and metaphysics. Here our notions of the stability of physical p h e n o m e n a are overturned, as
both the limits of logic and the bounds of certainty offered by faith are tested. O u r efforts to
frame the world invariably c o m e off as provisional, subjective, and, ultimately, false.
Watts proceeds to point out that it is precisely the artist's ability to frame reality that sets
his work apart from nature: 'every work of art involves a frame. A frame of some kind is
precisely what distinguishes a painting, a poem, a musical composition, a play, a dance, or a
piece of sculpture from the rest of the world.' Framing and lighting, he says, are the tools
which create 'marvellous compositions' in the hands of a truly skilled photographer. A n
unskilled photographer will create 'only messes, for he does not k n o w h o w to place the
frame, the border of the picture, where it will be in relation to the contents. H o w eloquently
this demonstrates that as soon as w e introduce a frame anything does not go.'81
A s w e have seen, it is this notion of framing as a function of mastery and power that the
artists of Fluxus questioned relentlessly. The emergence of intermedia - a range of structures
that lay between media - was an extraordinary manifestation of this questioning. At a period
in aesthetic thinking characterised by Clement Greenberg, Abstract Expressionism and serial
music, all seeking to foster the self-reflectivity of media (that is, the fullest expression of the
materiality, limits and language of each) - the notion of intermedia was, at the very least
radical.82 But the artists of Fluxus went a step further, questioning the enframing of the artist
him- or herself as a site of privilege, as an individual whose mastery lends special weight to
aesthetic choices.
George Brecht, two years before the publication of Watts' essay, appraised the role of
chance in the work of Jackson Pollock, noting that the most remarkable aspects of Pollock's
work happen beyond the artist's ability, conscious or unconscious as it m a y be, to assert total
control over his materials. Unconscious production, or better, 'improvisation', is still a form
of control, a framing, a function of the interiorisation and mastery of a set of learned skills
and familiar materials. For the experienced artist such as Pollock, or Watts' master
photographer, skills have been internalised to the point where production becomes
naturalised, becomes 'second nature', as it were; as such, the works produced by the artist
occur with the apparent effortlessness and certainty of natural force. In a sense, this is indeed
the 'Zen' of the arts.
But for Brecht, w h o was trained as a scientist, the value of Pollock's work is strictly a
technical matter. H e sees the intervention of an 'infinite number of variables', such as 'paint
viscosity, density, rate of flow at any instant; and direction, speed and configuration of the
applicator, to say nothing of non-uniformity in the paint', as mitigating the artist's power of
absolute expression. Brecht cites Pollock's One, 1950 as an example of an exercise in which
'differently-coloured streams of paint have flowed into each other after application, resulting
in a commingling completely out of the artist's hands.'83
W h a t is of greatest concern to Brecht are the microscopic, natural processes that occur
beyond the artist's capacity to assert his will over them, as the paint settles into itself, drip
melting into drip. A t this level of occurrence, the notion of 'paint' on 'canvas' no longer
makes any sense; in the realm of the molecular, paint might just as well be molten lava,
hurricane winds or tomato sauce. If this is the case, according to Brecht, then it is no longer
valuable to regard the artist as the producer of extraordinary objects, as these objects are no
longer perceived as set apart from any other object in nature. The physical laws of a painting
are no different than the physical laws that govern nature itself. T o subject this continuum to
an arbitrary fragmentation - the function of a choosing subjectivity - is seen by Brecht as a
pretension in direct conflict with natural law.
118 DAVID T DORIS
Here Watts makes an important point. The artist, if she has no wish for her work to be
considered 'art' - as here opposed to 'the total universe' - should avoid framing devices of
every sort, should not commodify, or even present, the work in any way. But can such a task
be accomplished? C a n an artist create an art work that transports none of the signs of being
'art'? For George Brecht, the artist, and the images produced by the artist, are simply
manifestations of nature:
Here I would like to introduce the general term 'chance-imagery' to apply to our
formation of images resulting from chance, wherever these occur in nature. (The word
'imagery' is intentionally ambiguous enough, I think, to apply either to the physical act
of creating an image out of real materials, or to the formation of an image in the mind,
say by abstraction from a more complex system.) O n e reason for doing this is to place
the painter's, musician's, poet's, dancer's chance images in the same conceptual
category as natural chance-images (the configuration of m e a d o w grasses, the
arrangement of stones on a brook bottom), and to get away from the idea that an
artist makes something 'special' and beyond the world of ordinary things. A n Alpine
peak or an iris petal can m o v e us at times with all the subtle power of a 'Night Watch'
or one of the profound themes of Opus 131. There is no a priori reason w h y moving
images should originate only with artists.85
With no clear distinction between 'art' and 'nature', or between 'artist' and 'nature', the
opens up a democratisedfieldof production in which anyone can fulfil the role of an artist, in
which anything - anything fully an example of itself - can be appreciated as a 'unique' work,
that is, as nothing particularly special or extraordinary. 'Act of imagination or perception is
in itself an arrangement,' says Brecht, 'so there is no avoiding anyone making arrangements.'
H o w then can one create a work that is not art? O n e response is simply to call everything art,
as in this 1967 work by Ben Vautier:
DANCE REPORT
Choreography considered as the motion between
your present position and your next position.
non-sculpture and dance/non-dance, and in doing so, have created specifically anti-art
works. Yet there remains an attachment to the notions of'sculpture', of'dance', and so, of
'art', The terms 'anti-art' and 'non-art' acquire meaning only inasmuch as they are the
oppositional and complementary terms for 'art'. 'Art' - its parameters indeed broadened by
such works - remains as an enframing.
As George Brecht points out, the distinctions between 'art' and 'non-art', between what is
'inside' the frame and 'outside' the frame, are inappropriate, arbitrary and without real
meaning.86 Brecht addresses this arduous, paradoxical problem in a 1972 interview with
Robin Page, presenting a challenge to 'anybody w h o thinks they're making art, or non-art: to
make a work which cannot possibly be considered art. There's the problem. Send your letters
to George Brecht ... and I'll send you something in return .. .unless I'm too busy.'87 The
artist presents the problem, then sits back to read his collection of 'thrillers', leading a
perfectly inartistic life as others fumble through the semantic labyrinth.88 The artist himself
has become an exemplative work, the embodiment of his o w n idea.
f/h Trace
Fill French horn with rice
bow to audience.
120 D A V I D T DORIS
Watts' piece f/h Trace is effective - will be read as 'funny' - only to the degree that it
subverts the audience's expectations. A s is standard practice in classical Western musical
performance, one expects the musician or performer to acknowledge the audience with a
polite b o w before he commences the work at hand In this piece - frequently performed in
formal concert attire, as were many Fluxus works - Robert Watts turns the expectation of
the audience upside-down, as the performer's requisite b o w is accompanied by a sudden
splashing of rice upon the stage. Here the b o w is the performance, and ... well, I suppose you
had to be there really. The simplest gesture at once overturns the pretence and p o m p of
traditional performance etiquette, by jamming the received codes that constitute the viewer's
frame of reference.
Another example by Mieko Shiomi:
Y o k o Ono:
Ben Vautier:
Tango (1964)
The audience is invited to dance a tango.
What these simple events have in c o m m o n is a particular m o d e of fiddling with the culturally
conditioned constructs by which one comes to receive - and so expect - the experience of
performance as social ritual. A theatrically garbed performer is whacked on the head with her
own violin, an unlikely trumpet is pulled from a saxophone case, the members of an orchestra
line up and bang their heads against a wall on cue from the conductor, the audience - and not
the 'performers' - dance the tango, a single shoe taps. During Fluxus performance, received
notions of performance are mocked inverted, and shown the door.
Ken Friedman calls this aspect of Fluxus 'Zen Vaudeville'.93 Maciunas calls it 'Neo-
Haiku theatre'.94 Indeed, like Fluxus, Zen regards laughter as an important index of
understanding: as we have seen, the transmission of Zen began with a monomorphic gesture
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 121
- the presentation of a single flower - and a smile of reception. The smile is the signifier of
sudden realisation, of 'getting the point' and approving its significance. In Zen, says
Christmas Humphries, laughter is 'a sign of sanity; and the comic is deliberately used to
break up concepts, to release tensions, and to teach what cannot be taught in words.
Nonsense is used to point to the beyond of rational sense.'95
In N a m June Paik's Zen for Head, the grand Abstract Expressionist gesture is turned quite
literally on its head. The performer simply dips his head into a bucket of ink and paints a line
down a sheet of cheap kraft paper that has extended along thefloor.Using his head as a brush,
the performer paints a line (indeed, Paik's work is an interpretation of L a M o n t e Young's
Composition #10 1960: 'Draw a straight line and follow it.'). In contrast to the monumental
status of, say, a large-scale calligraphic work by Franz Kline, Paik's gesture does not, cannot,
function as an index of the master's hand - no hand was used, for one thing, but is rather the
index of any body, any performer to chooses w h o enact the work. The painting is thus no
masterpiece, at least not by traditional standards, and so points an accusatoryfingerat the very
notion of mastery. Paik's 'crazy Zen', as it is called by K e n Friedman, provides a welcome,
unexpected relief from the high seriousness of Abstract Expressionism.96
Paik's work is not without its precedent. Conrad Hyers notes a certain eighth-century Zen
painter-priest by the n a m e Wang-hsia, nicknamed W a n g - m o (Ink W a n g ) :
W h e n he was drunk, he would splatter ink on the surface, laughing and singing the
while. H e might kick it, or rub it on with his hands, wave (his brush) about or scrub
with it ... [Then] he would follow its configurations to make mountains, or rocks, or
clouds, or water.' According to another authority he would even dip his head in the
container of ink, and paint with his hair as a brush.97
The resulting laughter, says Conrad Hyers (speaking of the laughter that seems so prevalent
in Zen, and which often accompanies the solution of a koan), is an expression of cognitive
shock in the face of a rupture of the expected, the dissolution of the frame's authority - an
explosive decentring of the self. According to Hyers, this sort of laughter
leads toward the debunking of pride and the deflating of ego. It mocks grasping and
clinging, and cools desire. It cuts through ignorance and precipitates insight. It turns
hierarchies upside d o w n as a prelude to collapsing them, and overcomes dualities and
conflicts by embracing and uniting opposites. The whole intellectual and valuational
structure of the discriminating mind is challenged, with a result that is enlightening and
liberating.98
The space of the comic is thus a forum for the investigation of boundaries, a site of
transgression in which received, unspoken codes are simultaneously revealed and
overturned. Like the blasphemies of the Zen koan, the irreverent wackiness of m a n y
Fluxus works condemns self-serving notions of the sacred in art. For the artists of Fluxus,
no act was absolute, no art work was transcendent, and no artist was above receiving a pie
in the face. In Zen and in Fluxus, h u m o u r throws a monkey-wrench into the smooth
operation of the given and the k n o w n , posing instead a fragmented world of questions, of
absolute instability, a stream of flux in which the integrity of both the object and the subject
are perpetually up for grabs.
122 DAVID T DORIS
NO-SELF
The very n a m e of Fluxus points to an appreciation of the world as afieldof transformation, as
flux. Like Zen, Fluxus posits a reconfiguration of the subject as an inextricable component
within thisfield.Rather than presenting the subject as acting upon the world, there is a sense of
reciprocal determination, an inter-action. George Brecht notes: T conceive of the individual as
part of an infinite space and time; in constant interaction with that continuum (nature), and
giving order (physically or conceptually) to a part of the continuum with which he interacts.'99
In Zen thought, this continuum is k n o w n as sunyata, the primordial emptiness.
'Form is emptiness, emptiness is form', reads the Hannya Shingyo, the 'Heart Sutra', one
of the essential texts of Zen. Indeed, the essence of Z e n thought is found in the notion of
emptiness, sunyata, the very ground of being. All dharmas, that is manifest forms, are seen as
having n o independent self-nature, n o individual essence that separates them from the fabric
of being, from any other dharma. These forms are themselves impermanent, provisional.
continually becoming but never arriving at a m o m e n t of being. N o r m a n Bryson examines the
notion of sunyata in the work of the Japanese philosopher Keiji Nishitani, pointing out that
the notion of an entity as a fixed body, clearly delineated from the world, does not hold up
when regarded in the light of sunyata. 'Subject' and 'object' become inappropriate terms, as
they are both revealed to be aspects of the other, each part of 'the universal field of
transformations':
Nishitani's project, as outlined by Bryson, is a radical critique of the Cartesian cogito - the
notion of the subject as a permanent stable centre around which objects arrange themselves,
shifting in and out of the subject's experiential horizon. Rather than regarding the subject as
isolable entity, Nishitani - whose terms are clearly structured after Buddhist progenitors -
asserts that what appears to be a given object is only the difference between that object and
the surrounding field. T h e inverse is also true: the surrounding field is constituted of the
difference between it and the given object. A s discussed earlier, object andfield,'it' and
'other', are interdependent, and thus the object cannot be examined in isolation from that
field, cannot be framed. Nor, for that matter, can the subject be isolated or framed.
In Zen the individual, not bound by the notion of self as fixity, is rather understood as an
integral part of an ever-shifting field of becoming. With n o selfhood to preserve, the
individual - w h o m Rinzai calls 'the one w h o has neither shape nor form, neither root nor
trunk, and w h o , having no abiding place, is full of activities'101 - is perpetually responding to
the newest developments within thefieldof sunyata.
If a m a n comes to m e and says, T a m seeking the Buddha,' I come out in conformity with
the situation of purity. If a m a n comes to m e and asks about the bodhisattva, I come out
in accordance with the situation of compassion (maitri or karuna). If a m a n comes to me
and asks about bodhi [or enlightenment], I come out in accordance with the situation of
incomparable beauty. If a m a n comes to m e and asks about nirvana. I come out in
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 123
accordance with the situation of serene quietude. The situations m a y vary infinitely, but
the M a n varies not. So, [it is said], '[It] takes forms in accordance with conditions, like the
m o o n reflecting itself [variously] in water.' ° 2
It is thus inaccurate to conceive the self as a static entity, sitting solitary on a meditation
cushion. O n the contrary, the individual continually manifests both stasis and mobility, and
produces these experiences as n e w occasions arise. 'He responds to all kinds of situations and
manifests his activities, and yet comes out of nowhere.'103 Suzuki points out that the self, a
manifestation of the formlessfieldof sunyata, is thus difficult to locate as a centre of experience:
The Self is ever moving or becoming. It is a zero which is a staticity, and at the same
time an infinity, indicating that it is all the time moving. The Self is dynamic.
The Self is comparable to a circle which has no circumference, it is thus sunyata,
emptiness. But it is also the centre of such a circle. The Self is the point of absolute
subjectivity which m a y convey the sense of immobility or tranquility. But as this point
can be m o v e d anywhere w e like, to infinitely varied spots, it is really no point. The point
is the circle and the circle is the point.104
Meditation, the principal practice of Zen, is thus not a recentring of the subject, a cultivation
of 'inner' tranquility or stability. Rather, meditation is a continuous process of responsiveness in
accordance with 'exterior' forces, a decentring of the subject's illusory selfhood. A s Dick Higgins
explains, the 'point' of which Suzuki speaks can indeed be m o v e d anywhere:
We have no fear of becoming: our thought processes are meditations (for our parents,
the purpose of meditation was medicinal - it was to clear the mind and restore
perspective. It had to be slow, for fear of losing control. But w e begin where they left off
- w e need not control in order to experience, so w e can meditate at any speed and
virtually in any situation) - 'meditations' they are, in the sense that they are liberated
processes of thought and feeling, as opposed to directed ones. W e are quite readily
capable of experiencing these as emptiness and beyond concrete conceptibility. All this
adds up to a new mentality, at least for the Western world.105
As Higgins points out, thought is not 'directed' outward, but is 'liberated', able to respond
and conform to any given situation. T h e thinking self is reflexive of its surround,
reconstituted in the margin between the subject and object. Here is a mutual interdependence
of subject and object, two centres that re-establish themselves - through interaction - as a
unity. In a 1978 interview John Cage examines the notion of the 'new mentality' of the
decentred self, the dismantling of the cogito:
John Cage I like to think that each thing has not only its own life but its own
centre and that that centre is, each time, the exact centre of the
Universe. That is one of the principal themes I've retained from m y
studies of Zen.
Daniel Charles Must w e dissociate the idea of life and the idea of the centre?
John Cage Suzuki taught m e that in fact w e never stop establishing, outside the
life of things, a means of measure and that w e then continually try to
re-place each thing into the grid of our measure. Thus, w e lose the
things; w e forget them, or w e disfigure them. Zen teaches us that w e
are really in a situation of decentring, relative to the grid. In this
situation, everything is at the centre. There is then a plurality and a
multiplicity of centres. A n d they are all interpenetrating. A n d Zen
adds: in non-obstruction. T o live, for all things, is to be at the centre.
That entails interpenetration and non-obstruction.
124 DAVID T DORIS
A n aphorism is a play of forces, a state of forces each of which is always outside the
others. A n aphorism means nothing, signifies nothing, and has no more a signifier
than a signified element... A n aphorism is a state offerees, the last of which is at the
same time the most recent; the most present and ultimate/temporary one is always the
most external force. Nietzsche poses it very clearly: if you want to k n o w what I mean,
find the force which gives a meaning, a new meaning if need be, to what I say. Connect
the text with that force. There are no problems of interpretation of Nietzsche, there
are only problems of machination: machinating Nietzsche's text, trying tofindout
with what external, current force he succeeds in getting something through, a flow of
107
energy.
Like the aphorism, the Fluxus event score is forever unfinished, continually calling to
external forces to provide completion, to resonate with and overlap the text as set forth by
the author. In thefieldof transformations, there is only a perpetual coming into being of the
text - a becoming that includes as part of its constitution the very subjectivity that is engaged
in its realisation. There is thus only 'legitimate misinterpretation', notes Deleuze, 'treat the
aphorism as a p h e n o m e n o n awaiting n e w forces that c o m e and "subjugate" it, m a k e it work,
or else m a k e it explode.'108
Exercise
Determine the centre of an object or event.
Determine the centre more accurately.
Repeat, until further inaccuracy is impossible.
- George Brecht
It is the provisional nature of the Fluxus event score, its ability to be legitimately
misinterpreted by any external force, that releases it from the grid of subjectivity, the notion
of a permanent fixative power, which Deleuze calls the despotic machine. Like Nietzsche's
aphorisms, Fluxus scores maintain an immediate relationship with the outside; indeed, they
cannot be said to have independent being apart from this externalising relationship. Another
blow to the cogito. Says Deleuze, 'opening a text by Nietzsche at r a n d o m dispenses us for one
of thefirsttimes from interiority, the interiority of the soul or of consciousness, the
interiority of essence or of concept, in other words, from what has always been the principle
of philosophy.'109 T h e same is true of Fluxus event scores. T o quote Rinzai, the work - like
the participant w h o is engaged in the work's realisation - 'takes forms in accordance with
conditions, like the m o o n reflecting itself [variously] in water.'
Shadow Piece II
1
Project a shadow over the other
side of this page.
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 125
2
Observe the boundary line between
the shadow and the lighted part.
3
Become the boundary line.
- Chieko Shiomi, 1964
Opus 50
Place the palms of your hands side by side on this piece of paper - After a short time:
Raise the hands and place your eyes in the same level as the palms - Notice the
coincident unus pultorum retardation in the situations
etc!
or something else
- Eric Andersen
In place of interiority, both of the text and of the subject, Fluxus events establish a shifting
zone of impermanence, a nomadism in which the self is continually redefined in accord with
the external force (for example, an event score, a performer, the weather) that is now
asserting its momentary demands, and with which it now interacts. In Fluxus, as in Zen
thought, the self is whatever one happens to be doing at any given moment. In thefieldof
sunyata, a third entity reveals itself, an entity neither subject nor object, and yet constituted
by both - subject and object are, as we have seen, the same thing. Identity becomes
multiplicity.
One must take special care not to influence oneself. Tomorrow one will write Schubert's
Fifth Symphony, cook some kohlrabi, develop a non-toxic epoxy, and invent still
another kind of theatre; or perhaps one will just sit and scream; or perhaps ...
-Dick Higgins1"
You don't try to make a style, or to achieve some identity - I mean your artwork
doesn't try to achieve identity. You try to be out there in the waste open land and fool
around
- Eric Andersen
Here is the notion of self as a passage, a nomad, a flow of intensities as one shifts from one
plateau of experience to the next.112 O n the periphery, out in the 'waste open land', the
nomad is a marginal entity (if he can be called an entity at all), a circle without circumference,
without a centre. The nomad stands in direct confrontation with the prevailing under-
standing of the artist as mythic subjectivity, the Producer of Great Works, organic, whole,
fixed, comprehensible. The nomad escapes the over-coding of the State, of stasis, functioning
instead within a smooth, open-ended, decoded space, a space in which one can freely move
from any one point to any other. This perpetual play of difference and joyful anarchy in the
126 DAVID T DORIS
face of the determinate is the space of a counterculture. 'Its m o d e of distribution', says Brian
Massumi, 'is the nomos: arraying oneself in an open space (hold the street), as opposed to the
logos of entrenching oneself in a closed space (hold the fort).'
America was, you know, patting itself on the back. It already had its new art form
[Abstract Expressionism], but w e could have the street.
- Alison Knowles" 4
We are not nonparticipants, like the beats were: We are arming to take the barricades.
Dick Higgins II?
A s Higgins notes, the beatniks were a generation of self-perceived rebels w h o played the role
of 'nonparticipants', and whose pursuit of a romantic individualism ultimately led them back
into the fold of a tradition, back into the mythos of the American frontier. (Indeed, the
beatniks' attraction to Eastern philosophies rang of transcendence, of the ecstatic self
subsumed into the oneness of nature.) This same mythos was concurrently being lionised and
reified in the visual arts as 'American-Type' painting: big, fast and unshaven, the abstract
Expressionist gesture became the loaded signifier of American selfhood - the automatic writing
of the American unconscious, vast and spontaneous, but always bound to its territory.
N a m June Paik points out that it is not only the destiny of American arts to be the vehicles
of such territorialities, but that of Zen as well. In the June 1964 edition of cc fiVe ThReE,
Paik had a great deal to say about Zen:
Paik, in this passage, in part an invective against Zen, strikes an important note. Zen, he
asserts, is 'responsible of Asian poverty', and if Zen is to be justified, it must be seen in that
light. In feudal Japan, for example, Zen was revived in the fourteenth century, transmitted
within a monastic system overseen and subsidised by the imperial court, as well as by the
many military governors, or shogun, who ruled the provinces. The monks, trained in
cloistered mountain monasteries and respected by the masses as highly educated spiritual
leaders, were regarded by the rulers as 'effective means for quelling unruly elements among
the populace'."6 Zen promotes an essential quietism amongst its practitioners, a 'doctrine
of self-abandonment' that demands that one reins in desires. As Paik points out, Zen
teaches 'how to be satisfied with 7 5 % , how to be satisfied with 38%'; in short, it teaches
one to accept and be satisfied with one's lot in life, even if that lot is economic poverty.
Clearly, such a teaching would have been immensely useful to a military ruler (who himself
would certainly not be satisfied with these percentages), and Zen quickly became official
culture in Japan.
In the United States of the 1950s and 1960s, the incorporation of a methodology of Zen in
the arts meant something quite different from that of its use in feudal Japan. For the
beatniks, and for artists such as Franz Kline, Zen's appeal was that of a pure, exotic,
certainly mystifying other. Zen offered an ancient, solemn set of artistic traditions far
removed from reason and naturalistic representation. A sanction and inspiration for a self-
perceived 'advance guard', Zen was employed by artists and poets as a tool to explore the
frontiers of the unconscious, the unmitigated, spontaneous source of selfhood.
Like the beatniks, and certainly like the counterculture(s) that flourished throughout the
1960s, the artists of Fluxus were concerned with establishing an unmediated relationship with
the world. But the artists of Fluxus, as we have seen, did not regard the self- particularly the
unconscious - as the absolute, generative centre of this world. Rather, there was a concern
with decentring the self, positioning the self as one provisional centre in perpetual interaction
with the infinite multiplicity of centres that constitute the world. In contrast to the Zen of the
beatniks - a means to consummate the 'manifest destiny' of modernism, the revelation of the
frontiers of selfhood - the Zen appreciated by the artists of Fluxus was, as Paik says, 'anti-
avant-garde, anti-frontier spirit, anti-Kennedy'. Indeed, Zen, as received by some of the
artists of Fluxus, posits a self that is no self at all. George Maciunas understood this, and
employed it to advance his own notions of 'selflessness'. In a letter dated 16 March 1964,
Maciunas offered some advice to Ben Vautier:
K n o w honor
But keep to the role of the disgraced
A n d be a valley to the empire.
If you are a valley to the empire.
Then the constant virtue [power] will be sufficient ...
- Tao T e Ching, Chapter 27
The artists of Fluxus walked an alternative, ultimately revolutionary passage through, or
rather as, a valley to the empire of representation. In contrast to the logos of the beatniks and
Abstract Expressionists - the narrative of the frontier, the production of a m y t h of formal
wholeness validated by a logic of transcendental affirmation - the artists of Fluxus posited no
absolutes, n o methods, no tools, no fixed structures for their works. Rather, their m o d e of
production was based on the notion of a plenitude of possible meanings and interpretations -
detached from an understanding of the work as an extension of the artist's identity. Dick
Higgins calls such work 'post-self cognitive', or 'post-cognitive' for short. T h e post-cognit
work, says Higgins, is concerned with
the object qua object, the p o e m within the poem, the word within the word - the process
as process, accepting reality as a found object, enfolding it by the edges, so to speak,
without trying to distort it (artistically or otherwise) in its depiction. The work becomes
the matrix - any kind of matrix will do for the particular needs of the particular work.
The artist gives you the structure: you m a yfillit in yourself. This is not formalism
(though it includes structuralism as an aspect) - the emphasis is still on the subject. But
the subject is accepted - the artist will have to look elsewhere, if he wants to prove his
identity.120
The works of which Higgins speaks are no longer grounded in the subjectivity of the
artist, but in the horizons of a particular work's inception, its m a n y possible centres and
contexts. T h e form of a work is entirely contingent upon the exigencies of its moment(s) of
realisation, beyond the control of the artist. In another essay Higgins notes:
O n e thing above all was foreign to Fluxus works: personal intrusion on the part of the
artist. In fact there was almost a cult a m o n g Fluxus people - or, more properly, a fetish,
carried far beyond any rational or explainable level - which idealised the most direct
relationship with 'reality,' specifically objective reality. T h e lives of objects, their
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 129
histories and events were considered somehow more realistic than any conceivable
personal intrusion on them.121
Each thing is preaching the law [Dharma] incessantly, but this law is not something
different from the thing itself. Haiku is the revealing of this preaching by presenting us
with the thing devoid of all our mental twisting and emotional discoloration; or rather,
it shows the thing as it exists at one and the same time outside and inside the mind,
perfectly subjective, ourselves undivided from the object in its original unity with
ourselves ... It is a way of returning to nature, in short, to our Buddha nature. It is a
way in which a cold winter rain, the swallows of evening, even the very day in its
hotness and the length of the night become truly alive, share in our humanity, speak
their o w n silent and expressive language.122
Adopting this viewpoint, it would be incorrect to say that Fluxworks (many of which were
known as 'neo-haiku events') are inexpressive as a result of the artist's self-limiting role in
their production. Rather, the site of expression in Fluxworks has been radically shifted from
the artist to the object (no longer necessarily an art object), which in turn must be engaged by
a receiving subjectivity, an arbitrarily imposed force, if it is to come to presence at all. In Zen
thought, object and subject are interdependent, and this is clearly the case in Fluxus as well.
Fluxus works are singularities, each m o m e n t of performance identical only with itself, subject
to the intervention of an infinite number of potential, temporary forces. Lines of force and
transformation can be drawn between any number of works, realisations, participants,
available materials, points of view. There is thus no repetition, no re-presentation, in the
space of the Fluxus nomad, only the production of possibilities, permutations and new
intensities. Nothing lasts long enough, or speaks with enough authority, for it to be re-
presented. Jean-Francois Lyotard declares that, in the place of representation,
one should insist on the forgetting. Representation and opposition imply memory: in
passing from one singularity to the other, the one and the other are maintained together
(through channels of circulation, set-ups, fantasies or libidinal configurations of
cathexes). A n identity (the same) is implied in this memory. In the eternal return as a
desire for potentiality, there is precisely no memory. The travel is a passage without a
trace, a forgetting, instantaneouses which are multiple only for the discourse, not in
themselves. Such is the reason for the absence of representation in this voyage, this
nomadism of intensities.
We find this same idea in Zen - the notion of forgetting as a way of maintaining an
immediate awareness of the shifting present, beyond representation. In the Hsin Hsin Ming,
one of the earliest Zen texts, Seng Ts'an (d. 606?), the third patriarch of Zen, points out that
in forgetting, one moves beyond the realm where comparisons can be made, and where even
the notion of identity ('oneness') is transcended:
This idealised space of transcendence and forgetting is sunyata - emptiness - the source of
everything that is the case.l2;> In the Hsin Hsin Ming, itself quite imbued with a Taoist
sensibility, we are given instructions as to h o w one might fully experience this: 'no strain, no
exertion, no wasting of energy.' In Zen and Fluxus, one simply does what one is doing now,
even if that something is not very m u c h at all. This can be art, if one wishes to call it such, o
it can be Zen or meditation, sport, music, work, relaxation, education - whatever one might
wish to call it. In a 1967 letter to John Cage, George Brecht strikes to the heart of the matter:
T continue to do as little as possible and to be closer perhaps to Chuang-Tzu than to Hui-
Neng though they're both great guys. The refrigerator door works better n o w that I've oiled
it.'126
In Zen, many of the artists involved in Fluxus found a paradigm for destabilising the
individual's relationship to the object and to the world. This paradigm necessitated a
rethinking of the forms of presentation that would seek not do violence to the object or the
individual by submitting them to closure. Instead, the new forms would recognise the
relationship between object and self within a condition of constant change, each presencing
for a m o m e n t and then receding back into the horizon whence it came, leaving behind
scarcely a trace of itself. In this recognition, Fluxus, like Zen, shed doubt on the notion of
ownership and so circumvented the mechanisms of the system of official 'avant-garde'
culture, the business of art as business - at least temporarily. Commerce, after all, has a way
of catching up with even the mostfleetingof ephemera.
The year 1997 marked the thirty-fifth anniversary of thefirstFluxus festivals. During these
thirty-five years, the artists of Fluxus have dodged and flitted between categories, surfacing
now and again to tweak the collective nose of the art world. Fluxus brought the very act of
perception up for accounting by attempting to clear the slate, eliminating everything that was
held to be nonessential to the acts of perceiving, of doing, of simply being in the world and
acting as if it mattered. If the sporadic outbursts of performances and publishing offer any
indication, Fluxus still has the power to do so. In Fluxus, said George Brecht in 1964,
'individuals with something unnameable in c o m m o n have simply naturally coalesced to
publish and perform their work.'127 Today, after so m a n y exhibitions and articles, that
'something' remains unnamable, those 'individuals' remain individuals. Perhaps this is what
has kept Fluxus vital over the course of these thirty-odd years: try as one might to name it,
Fluxus still cannot be pinned down, cannot be explained away. The passage of time has
demonstrated that the ultimate fact of Fluxus m a y be that which is inscribed within its very
name.
NOTES
1 Portions of this essay first appeared in the catalogue that accompanied the 'Fluxus
Virus' exhibition at the Galerie Schiippenhauer, Cologne, in 1992, under the title
'Fluxus and Zen? Shut M y Mouth, Quick!' The current essay constituted, by and large,
m y Master's thesis for Hunter College, N e w York from which I graduated in 1993.
2 See, for example, Dick Higgins, 'In einem Minensuchboot u m die Welt', in Rene Block,
1962 Wiesbaden FLUXUS 1982, Wiesbaden, Harlekin Art, and Berlin, Berliner
Kunstlerprogramm des D A A D , 1982, p 127, where he wrote, '... in the autumn of
1962, fluxus became FLUXUS, and the press decided to call us the "Fluxus-Leute"
(Fluxus-people).'
3 B Mats, 'Birth of Fluxus: The Ultimate Version', Kalejdoskop [Ahus] (1979), no. 3; cited
in Clive Phillpot and Jon Hendricks, eds, Fluxus: Selections from the Gilbert and Lila
Silverman Collection, N e w York, The M u s e u m of Modern Art, 1988, p 9.
4 George Brecht, Chance Imagery, A Great Bear Pamphlet, N e w York, Something Else
Press, 1964, p 3.
5 Ibid., p 4.
6 Ibid., p 5.
7 Ibid., p 7.
8 D T Suzuki, Zen Buddhism: Selected Writings of DT Suzuki, N e w York, Doubleday &
Co, 1956, p 234.
9 Dick Higgins, 'A Something Else Manifesto', in D Higgins, A Dialectic of Centuries:
Notes towards a Theory of the New Arts, 2nd edn, Printed Editions, N e w York, 1976,
pp 102-3.
10 Author's interview with Eric Andersen, N e w York, 3 October 1992.
11 Robert Filliou, however, remarks in a letter to the editor of the Berlingske Tidende dated
21 December 1963 that, 'many of us have been influenced by Zen Buddhism'. In Harald
Szeeman and Hans Sohm, Happening & Fluxus, Cologne, Kunstverein, 1970.
12 George Brecht, 'Something about Fluxus', in FLuxus ccfiVe ThReE (June 1964).
13 Barbara Moore, 'George Maciunas: A Finger in Fluxus', Artforum (October 1982) no.
21,p40.
14 Larry Miller, Videotaped interview with George Maciunas, 24 March 1978; text
transcribed in this volume.
15 Emmett Williams, My Life in Flux and Vice Versa, London and N e w York, Thames &
Hudson, 1992, p 163'.
16 John Cage, Silence, Middletown, C T , Wesleyan University Press, 1961, p xi.
17 Cage: This testing of art against life was the result of m y attending the lectures of [DT]
Suzuki for three years. I think it was from 1949 to 1951.' In Richard Kostelanetz, The
Theater of Mixed Means, N e w York, The Dial Press, 1968.
18 Quoted in Rick Fields, How the Swans Came to the Lake, p 196.
19 Tomas Schmit, 'If I Remember Rightly', Art and Artists (1972), vol 7, no. 7, p 39.
20 'An Interview with George Brecht by Irmeline Lebeer', in Henry Martin, An
Introduction to George Brecht's Book of the Tumbler on Fire, Milan, Multhipla Edizioni,
1978 p 83.
21 In cc V TRE (January 1964).
132 D A V I D T DORIS
22 George Brecht, T h e Origin of Events', in Sohm and Szeeman, eds. Happening & Fluxus
23 Ibid.
24 'Excerpts from a Discussion between George Brecht and Allan Kaprow ...', in Fluxus cc
fiVe ThReE (June 1964).
25 La Monte Young, 'Lecture I960', in Achille Bonito Oliva et al, eds, Ubi Fluxus ibi
motus, Venice, Biennale and Milan, Mazeotta Editore 1990, p 203.
26 Thomas Cleary, No Barrier: Unlocking of the Zen Koan, N e w York, Bantam Boo
(1993), p 80.
27 Emmett Williams, My Life in Flux and Vice Versa, p 163.
28 'Stop to smile' might be better - or differently - translated as 'stop smiling'.
Disappearing Music For Face was realised as afilmin 1966. Shot at 2000 frames per
second, the image is an extreme close-up of a smiling mouth (that of Yoko Ono);
imperceptibly over the course of the ten-minutefilm,the smile fades. The score has also
been realised as a live performance.
29 D T Suzuki, Zen Buddhism: Selected Writings of DT Suzuki, N e w York, Doubleda
Co, 1956, p 130.
30 The Encyclopedia of Eastern Philosophy and Religion, Boston, Shambhala, 1989,
31 Ibid., p 182. An alternate translation might be 'a controversial or mysterious case'
(thanks to Matthew Miller for translation from Chinese).
32 Heinrich Dumoulin. Zen Buddhism: A History, vol 1, N e w York, Macmillan, 1988,
pp 201-2.
33 Ruth Fuller Sasaki and Isshu Miura, The Zen Koan, N e w York, Harcourt, Brace &
World, 1965, ppxi - xii.
34 Victor Musgrave, The Unknown Art Movement', Art and Artists (1972), vol 7, no. 7
12-14.
35 Dick Higgins, 'Something Else about Fluxus', in ibid., pp 16-21.
36 Dick Higgins, A Dialectic of Centuries, p 157.
37 George Brecht, 'Project in Multiple Dimensions', (1957/58), in Henry Martin,
Introduction to the Book of the Tumbler on Fire, pp 126-7.
38 Dick Higgins, A Dialectic of Centuries, p 156.
39 'An Interview with George Brecht by Irmeline Lebeer', in Martin, Introduction t
George Brecht's Book of the Tumbler on Fire, p 85.
40 Umberto Eco, The Role of the Reader, Bloomington, Indiana University Press, 1979, p
41 Ibid., p 53.
42 The following brief description is written in thefirstperson, with the understanding that
the phenomena described are personal, referring to a specific performance at a specific
time by a specific person (the author).
43 Personal interview with Takehisa Kosugi, 10 November 1993.
44 Dick Higgins, A Dialectic of Centuries, p 157. Reference to Bengt af Klintberg, Swe
folklorist affiliated with Fluxus.
45 This paradigm of mutual engagement, known in Mahayana ('Great Vehicle') Buddhism
as the doctrine of Interdependent Origination, is also an important precept in both Zen
and Taoism.
46 This translation is from Ben-Ami Scharfstein's Introduction to Yoel Hoffmann, The
Sound of the One Hand, N e w York, Basic Books, 1975, p 18.
47 George Brecht, The Origin of Events' (dated August 1970), in Sohm and Szeeman, eds,
Happening & Fluxus.
48 Dick Higgins, The Post-Cognitive Era: Looking for the Sense in IT All', in Higgins, A
Dialectic of Centuries, p 6.
49 Jackson Mac Low, 'Buddhism, Art, Practice, Polity', in Kent Johnson and Craig
Paulenich, Beneath a Single Moon, Boston, Shambhala, 1991, p 177.
50 Walter De Maria, 'Meaningless Work', (1960), in Jackson Mac Low and La Monte
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 133
81 Ibid.
82 See, for example, Clement Greenberg, Towards a Newer Laocoon', in Francis
Frascina, ed, Pollock and After: The Critical Debate, N e w York, Harper & Row,
pp 41-2. Originally published in Partisan Review (July - August 1940), vol 7, no. 4, p
296-310.
83 Brecht, Chance Imagery, p 6.
84 Watts, 'Beat Zen, Square Zen, and Zen', p 335.
85 Brecht, Chance Imagery, p 7.
86 For an interesting comparison of Brecht's and Vautier's views on these matters, the
reader is referred to 'A Conversation about Something Else: A n Interview with George
Brecht by Ben Vautier and Marcel Alocco', in Martin, An Introduction to Georg
Brecht's Book of the Tumbler on Fire, pp 67-73.
87 George Brecht, 'An Interview with Robin Page for Carla Liss (Who Fell Asleep)', Art
and Artists (1972), vol 7, no. 7, p 33.
88 This 'gesture' would seem to have a precursor in Marcel Duchamp's mythic decision to
'quit' his practice of art and pursue his love of chess. However, for Brecht, as we have
seen, there can be no 'quitting' or 'starting': he simply has some novels he'd like to read,
N o big deal.
89 Chart reprinted in Szeeman and Sohm, eds, Happening & Fluxus, unpaginated.
90 Dick Higgins, 'Fluxus: Theory and Reception', in Fluxus Research, special issue of Lu
Art Press (1991), vol 2, no. 2, pp 34-5; reprinted and re-edited in this volume.
91 Miller, Transcript of the Videotaped Interview with George Maciunas', p 26.
92 Friedman corrected the spelling of the title in his 1990 Correction Event: Zen Vaudevill
93 Ken Friedman, 'Fluxus Performance', in Gregory Battcock and Robert Nickas, eds,
The Art of Performance: A Critical Anthology, N e w York, EP Dutton, Inc, 1984,
94 George Maciunas, 'Expanded Arts Diagram", in Szeeman and Sohm, eds, Happening &
Fluxus.
95 Cited in Conrad Hyers, The Laughing Buddha: Zen and the Comic Spirit, Wakefiel
N H , Longwood Academic, 1991, p 34.
96 Friedman, 'Fluxus Performance', p 63.
97 Hyers, The Laughing Buddha, pp 49-50.
98 Hyers, The Laughing Buddha, p 17. For a more thorough analysis of the radical power
of laughter to overturn categories, the reader is referred to Mikhail Bakhtin, Rabelais
and His World, trans Helene Iswolsky, Bloomington, Indiana University Press, 1984.
99 George Brecht, 'From Project in Multiple Dimensions', in Martin, An Introduction t
George Brecht's Book of the Tumbler on Fire, p 126.
100 Norman Bryson, The Gaze in the Expanded Field', in Hal Foster, ed. Vision and
Visuality, Seattle, W A , Bay Press, 1988, pp 97-8.
101 Cited in D T Suzuki, Erich Fromm and Richard De Martino, Zen Buddhism and
Psychoanalysis, N e w York, Grove Press, 1960, p 35.
102 Ibid., pp 36-7.
103 Ibid., p 35.
104 Suzuki, 'Lectures on Zen Buddhism', in Zen Buddhism and Psychoanalysis, pp 25-6.
105 Higgins, 'An Exemplativist Manifesto' (1963), in Higgins, ed, A Dialectic of Centur
p 162.
106 John Cage and Daniel Charles, 'For the Birds', in semiotexte (1978), vol 3, no. 1,
107 Gilles Deleuze, 'Nomad Thought', in ibid., p 17.
108 Ibid., p 18.
109 Ibid., p 16.
110 Ibid.
Ill Higgins, 'A Something Else Manifesto', p 103.
112 An evening of Fluxus performance is often constituted by a chain of seemingly
ZEN VAUDEVILLE 135
disconnected Events. Presented one after the other, there is no sense of a narrative flow,
but rather of an accumulation of singularities. This recalls the disjunctive structure of
aphoristic books such as Nietzsche's The Gay Science, as it recalls that of the great koan
collections, the Rinzairoku and the Wumenguan, as well as the Tao Te Ching and Paul
Reps' contemporary collection of Zen texts, Zen Flesh, Zen Bones.
113 Brian Massumi, A User's Guide to Capitalism and Schizophrenia, Cambridge, M A , M I T
Press, 1992, p 6.
114 Milman, 'Road Shows ...' p 100.
115 Higgins, Postface, p 18.
116 Dumoulin, Zen Buddhism: A History, vol 2, p 153.
117 Cited in Jon Hendricks, Fluxus Codex, N e w York, Abrams, 1988, pl33.
118 Jackson M a c L o w to the author, 3 August 1992.
119 Fluxus etc./Addenda II: The Gilbert and Lila Silverman Collection, Pasadena, C A , Baxter
Art Gallery, California Institute of Technology, 1983; cited in Phillpot and Hendricks,
Fluxus: Selections from the Gilbert and Lila Silverman Collection, p 12.
120 Higgins, T h e Post-Cognitive Era', p 6.
121 Higgins, 'Something Else about Fluxus', p 18.
122 In Daisetz T Suzuki, Zen and Japanese Culture, Princeton, Princeton University Press,
1970, p 228.
123 Jean-Francois Lyotard, 'Notes on the Return and Kapital', in semiotexte (1978), vol 3,
no. 1, p 52.
124 D T Suzuki, 'History of Zen Buddhism from Bodhidharma to Hui-Neng', in Essays in
Zen Buddhism (First Series), N e w York, Grove Press, 1949, p 200.
125 Actually, the idealised space of transcendence is called 'nirvana', but as seen by Zen,
there is really no idealised space of transcendence - or it is at most very unimportant -
and the concept of nirvana, like all concepts and names, is just more emptiness.
126 George Brecht to John Cage, 30 June 1967; cited in Martin, The Book of the Tumbler on
Fire.
127 Brecht, 'Something about Fluxus'.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author thanks those individuals involved in and around Fluxus who have shared their
thoughts and ideas during the research for this chapter: Eric Andersen, Ay-o, George Brecht,
Philip Corner, Marianne Filliou, Ken Friedman, Emily Harvey, Geoffrey Hendricks, Dick
Higgins, Helena Hungria, Alison Knowles, Takehisa Kosugi, Jackson M a c Low, Larry
Miller, Ben Patterson, Sara Seagull and Mieko Shiomi. Further thanks are due to Professors
Emily Braun and William Agee of Hunter College, Sarah Adams, Glenn Adamson, John
DelGaizo, Donna and R o b DelVecchio, Goldie Lable, Tashi Leo Lightning, Eric Miles,
A d a m Miller, Matthew Miller, Marc Mueller, Michael G. N e w m a n III, Jane Schreiber, and
to Professor Robert Farris Thompson of Yale University. This essay is dedicated with love
and gratitude to Martin and Arlene Doris, for their generosity and for their faith.
CRAIG SAPER:
FLUXUS AS A LABORATORY
M u c h has been said about the fact that Fluxus was not intended as an art movement.
Participants and historians alike have argued that Fluxus sought an alternative to the
commercial gallery system, along with its faith in masterpieces. In a letter to T o m a s Schmit,
George Maciunas argued that the goal of Fluxus was social, not aesthetic, and that it 'could
have temporarily the pedagogical function of teaching people the needlessness of art.'1
Historians point out that these efforts to transgress the boundaries of art eventually fail. The
art world eventually recuperates from once-radical transgressions, and dealers and collectors
soon learn to buy and sell even the most transitory objects and performances. The talk of
resistance and recuperation, however, obscures the idea of m a n y associated with Fluxus that
their work was never intended to function merely as part of the art world. There was
something more, and that something more is what w e miss when one considers Fluxus merely
from the perspective of art history.
M u c h attention is n o w directed to the monetary and historical value of Fluxus works as
works of art. This involves the customary and sometimes useful interpretation of Fluxus as an
art movement. Another interpretation of Fluxus interests those concerned with the impact of
electronic webs and Internet on future forms of thought, pedagogy and communication.
Fluxus offered a research methodology for and what I call 'networked ideas' and demonstrated
the value of those ideas in various experiments. That history has received less attention.
Fluxus often parodied the kind of art that posits a masterpiece appreciated by a spectator.
By contrast, Fluxus works highlighted socio-poetic interaction and encouraged epistemo-
logical experimentation a m o n g participant-users. Confronted with a Fluxus work, a
participant-user would first notice h o w these works played against the notion that art
should follow certain (modernist) rules of form.2
For example, one work by K e n Friedman suggests socio-poetic and anti-formalist
qualities. The work consists entirely of the following text: T h e distance from this sentence
to your eye is m y sculpture.' This work pokes fun at the normal criteria for sculpture. It
also suggests a particularly important interaction with the spectator. It goes beyond a
mere critical appreciation of art in its striving toward the status of masterpiece to suggest a
social network built on playing through or interacting a m o n g people, activities and
objects. In this sense, Fluxus functions as more than a way to organise information: it is
also a way to organise social networks, networks of people learning. These networks are
based on an interactive model of art rather than on the traditional model of art as a one-
way communication from sender to receiver, the notion of the artist offering inspired genius
FLUXUS AS A L A B O R A T O R Y 137
intended to dazzle spectators. This can be done in m a n y ways. In an issue of Editions Et, for
example, Eric Andersen's contribution consisted of three cards with instructions o n one side
on h o w to mail the card and these instructions o n the other side: 'don't d o anything to this
very nice card.'3 Typical of Fluxus work, these instructions put the participant in a
humourous double-bind and point to the social interaction involved in the work.
The social project of the Fluxus laboratory involves disseminating knowledge. This is the
social situation of learning. Simone Forti suggests that in the context of this social - that is,
anti-aesthetic project - Fluxus w o r k has no intrinsic value. T h e value of the work resides in
the ideas it implies to the reader, the spectator and to other participants. Forti goes on to
explain that, 'when the work has passed out of their [the producer's] possession, it is the
responsibility of the n e w owner to restore it or possibly even to remake it. T h e idea of the
work is part of the work here, and the idea has been transferred along with the ownership of
the object that embodies it.'4 Forti explains that the audience performs the piece in the
process of transferring the ideas. T h e w o r k is 'interactive'.5 T h e term interactive suggests the
shift away from the notion of passing some unadulterated information from the mind of an
author, an artist, or a teacher directly to the eyes and ears of a spectator. Instead, participants
interact with ideas, playing through possibilities rather than deciding o n the meaning of a
work once and for all. Dick Higgins categorises Fluxus under the phrase Exemplative Art,
which he defines as 'art as illustration or example or embodiment of idea, especially abstract
conception or principle'.6
Higgins' description of Fluxus 'art-games' can function as a coda for this particular type
of work. H e writes that in art-games, one 'gives the rules without the exact details', and
instead offers a 'range of possibilities'.7 Higgins goes o n to list a series of crucial elements in
art-games including social implications and a community of participants m o r e conscious of
other participants than in most forms of drama or of performance art, what w e might call
team spirit. A n d there is an element of fascination about w h e n the rules will take effect.
Again, the authors leave the details of the actual event open. In an essay titled, 'Getting into
Events', K e n Friedman discusses ways to perform Fluxus event scores:
Y o u can perform a Fluxus event in virtuoso or bravura style, and you can perform it
jamming each piece into the minimal time possible as Ben Vautier does; or, go for a
slow, meditative rhythm as Alison Knowles does; or, strike a balance as you'll see in the
concerts organised by Dick Higgins or Larry Miller. Pieces can have a powerful torque,
energised and dramatic, as in the work of Milan Knizak, the earthly folkloric touch
seen in Bengt af Klintberg's pieces; or, the atmospheric radiance, spiritual and dazzling,
that is seen in Beuys' work.'8
Significantly, these poetic scores d o not depend o n the voice of a reader. Instead a
participant-user 'reads' the poetic event by creating a situation. Fluxus event scores and
performance instructions have a didactic structural grammar; they seem to be parodies of
scientific experiments simply because they reduce theatricality to a set of instructions. Using
the trappings of a science experiment suggests a w a y to further displace the interpretation of
Fluxus as an art movement. Building and interacting with their work, rather than passively
appreciating it as a finished product, changes interpretation into a generative project. T h e
start of that sort of interpretation begins with a n e w concept for the endeavour previously
known as Fluxus: the Fluxus laboratory.
138 CRAIG SAPER
products, objects and events developed at the centre; and, 4) organisation of events and
performances by residents and visitors of the centre.'12
It was an effort to purge the art world of authors and creative geniuses. Like m a n y of the
contributions to assembling magazines, the works became models for alternative forms of
social organisation. Indeed, as Estera M i l m a n explains, 'Fluxus work (objects, paperworks,
publications, festivals, and performances) and the movement's social structures became
congruent and interchangeable.'13 George Maciunas' manifesto for Fluxus explains this
socio-poetic practice:
Fluxus F L U X A R T : non art - amusement forgoes distinction between art and non-art
forgoes artist's indispensability, exclusiveness, individuality, ambition, forgoes all
pretension towards a significance, variety, inspiration, skill, complexity, profundity,
greatness, institutional and commodity value. It strives for nonstructural, non-
theatrical, nonbaroque, impersonal qualities of a simple, natural event, an object, a
game, a puzzle, or a gag. It is a fusion of Spike Jones, gags, games, Vaudeville, Cage
and Duchamp. 1 4
The Fluxus project combined a sometimes parodic emulation of the Bauhaus model, with the
production of 'impersonal' conceptual games and puzzles, concrete poetry, along with an
interest in situations, experimental culture, and an attack on 'commodity value' in art. These
concerns and the mixing of these tendencies appeared in a number of Fluxus assemblings and
periodicals. While Vaudeville, Cage and D u c h a m p have secured prominent places in scholarship
on art and mass culture, Spike Jones still remains a somewhat marginal figure. Yet, his Musical
Depreciation Revue offers a whole array of useful jokes, gags, puns, spoonerisms and so on.
M y corporate n a m e for these works, the Fluxus laboratory, alludes to the function of
laboratories in large manufacturing concerns: they attempt to develop new products through
endless rounds of experiments, failures and sharing of successes a m o n g the participants. It
also subverts the notion of limited liability a m o n g corporate shareholders, to suggest that
possibilities were unlimited and the participants, unlike shareholders, had to take unlimited
chances. It even hints at the w a y some of the participants used a corporate umbrella, a single
name for m a n y diverse artists and divergent art works, to help them initiate a unique and
specific type of working with ideas. Although Maciunas' rhetoric suggests the anonymous
I B M structure in which all participants became anonymous contributors to the single
corporate identity, Fluxus was in reality closer to the Bell Labs model in which participants
were credited with particular innovations and works within the larger Fluxus project. Even
Maciunas, w h o tried to produce his contributions to m a n y works anonymously, n o w
regularly receives careful credit for each and every aspect of his contribution. M a n y of the
works were produced by a number of participants, and this aspect is still relatively rare in the
art world. T h e individual contributions were combined into something m u c h more
interesting than any of the parts alone.
This w a y of working placed creativity and innovation in the hands of a linked or
networked community rather than locating it in the mind of a sole genius in the form of a
single artist's inspiration. O f course, this has political ramifications, and it m a y or m a y not
have succeeded in negating or avoiding the art world's recuperative powers. The context of
a concept such as the Fluxus laboratory introduced a method of research that makes
increasing sense to those involved in transforming pedagogy and the creative process from
140 CRAIG SAPER
The destroyers-in-art include writers w h o obliterate words, burn books, and cut odd
words out of dictionaries and paste them up haywire. They tear books apart and shuffle
the pages so the narrative n o w reads surprisingly (which is art). Words are displaced
and lines transposed in a new and meaningful way. Some newspapers, it seems,
FLUXUS AS A L A B O R A T O R Y 141
especially in their hurriedfirsteditions, have long possessed a natural aptitude for the
new and the meaningful. That's art. O r is it ? More often it is error. Just as destruction-
in-art is mainly perverse, ugly, and anti-social.
If the whole frame can be shaken, rendered problematic, then this, too can ensure that
prior involvements - and prior distances - can be broken up and that, whatever else
happens, a dramatic change can occur in what it is that is being experienced ... negative
experiences ...'17
A m o n g the various ways to shake the frame or reflexively examine the frame and its
dissolution, Goffman mentions brackets, direct address to the audience, the 'fool' character
in a play, and, in terms of Fluxus, the spectacle-game. T h e spectacle-game addresses the
whole matter of the show under presentation, and, in doing so, sets in motion a merger of
performers and spectators - in some sense, the spectators (and their expectations) are put on
stage.18
One w a y these events play the spectacle-game is to announce a performance in a
conventional way. W h e n the audience arrives, some of the expected activities occur, but the
traditional performance does not take place. In this situation, Goffman explains that an
audience is m a d e 'conscious of its o w n restrictive conventions' in thinking of a performance
only in a traditional sense. These events create a situation where the audience has to interact
with the frame of reference. A s Goffman explains, in a discussion of Happenings, 'actual
performances of this kind often do succeed, of course, in driving the audience u p and d o w n
various keys in their effort to arrive at a viable interpretation of what is being done to
them.'19
George Maciunas had experimented with machines that use arbitrary constraints to
change the frame of reference. For example, his Smile Box, makes you smile. In a work he
142 C R A I G S A P E R
planned before he died, he charted the outline for a Fluxus laboratory experiment. His
Learning Machine (1969) functions as the transitional work between Fluxus and the Fluxus
laboratory. It would have contained charts, diagrams and atlases; it would have re-
categorised fields of knowledge. Maciunas only completed a two-dimensional diagram and
tabulation; he intended this diagram as thefirstsurface for a three-dimensional storage and
retrieval system. H e later built a few models of these machines, and one can consider all of
the Flux Kits as cognates for the Learning Machine. Even these incomplete diagrams and
models suggest a plan for using electronic media for a m e m o r y theatre dedicated to invention
rather than mere descriptions. Indeed, one could argue that the machine hints at a Fluxus
memory or intelligence (post-cognitive, involutionary and interactive).
Maciunas' machine lists all knowledge in a classification system. For the most part, the
grid is not exceptional. It closely resembles traditional taxonomies of knowledge, and it
suggests the classifications found in m e m o r y theatres. These were systems of classification
and organisation used in remembering large amounts of information. S o m e even attempted
to categorise all known information. O n e of the devices used to create a m e m o r y theatre was
the conceit of an imagined building. Giulio Camillo's m e m o r y theatres, for example, stuffed
all his knowledge into an imaginary R o m a n amphitheatre. This encyclopaedia, thesaurus and
poetry machine became 'a work of manic idiosyncrasy, resembling a private m u s e u m like
those of [Due Jean Floressas] des Esseintes, [Joris-Karl] Huysman's paragon of decadence.'20
The tradition of these m e m o r y devices goes back to Classical times when Simonides used
the m e m o r y of a tragic event as the basis for his device. W h e n he was asked to identify the
bodies in a collapsed building that he had left shortly before the collapse, he remembered
where each person stood. Later, he realised that he would never forget the way the room
appeared before the tragedy. A s a result, he learned to store particular types of information
with each figure. Later, he would imagine walking around the space while each of his former
friends held these bits of information. In this way, he could store m u c h more information
than he could remember without the aid of this system. The Learning Machine resembles this
effort to describe all knowledge.21 The use of a m e m o r y theatre shifts the process of knowing
and remembering from an organic cognition to a discursive practice - a learning machine.
This particular machine was not Maciunas' only foray into m e m o r y systems. H e had also, for
example, diagrammed the history of world architecture.
Maciunas' system contains a few anomalies. For example, he includes a heading called
Uology. This apparent neologism suggests a science of'u'. O f course, there is no traditional
science of Uology, but the possibility of such a science suggests the play between the particular
and the general discussed above. Another suggestive neologism is flexography, which m a y hint
at a flexible writing practice - a way to write in the Fluxacademy. In terms of h o w the Machine
organises information, it lists the term 'food' under 'light'; it lists 'light' under 'chemical'; and
'chemical' under 'engineering'. This suggestive organisation makes one rethink the way we
normally classify the notion of food. In another organisational aberration, it lists 'textual
criticism' under 'philology'; 'philology' under 'cybernetics'; and 'cybernetics' under 'biological
sciences' (which appears as two separate headings). It also lists 'cybernetics' both under
'applied math' and under 'physiology'. In terms of organisational suggestiveness, the art and
design section is the most interesting because it appears to function as a mise-en-abyme for the
rest of the memory grid. Everything in the rest of the classification grid is at least suggested in
FLUXUS AS A LABORATORY 143
the art and design section. In contrast to most classifications of art and design, however,
sculpture has no listing, and painting and drawing have only minor listings. In most traditional
taxonomies those three listings would be the dominant areas.
Maciunas' classification is different in m a n y ways. It does not quite match a mere
description of art and design. O n e possibility suggested by the classification is h o w a category
can shift from one heading to another; for example, it lists 'cinema' under 'photography', but
contains a special listing for 'expanded cinema'. W h a t Maciunas does in this work, and in his
chart on the history of art movements, is to provoke new possibilities through the unusual
classification of information. The startlingly wide scope of the art and design classification
includes wars, orgies, prisons, clouds, fountains, shells, insects, food, cybernetics ...
Including all or any of these headings in discussions of art and design makes the system a
provocation as m u c h as a description. H o w , for example, can one m a k e insects into art or
how are they already aesthetic or part of design?
Other than these few anomalies, the Learning Machine does not, atfirst,appear to
diverge from traditional taxonomies of knowledge. O n closer examination, however, there
is one key difference. The information is not structured in epochal categories - that is, the
Learning Machine does not structure the categories under headings according to historical
chronologies, movements, or periods, nor does it organise information according to
authors, artists, inventors, leaders or other individual systems. M u c h of the knowledge
taught in universities, and especially what is taught in secondary schools, depends on these
kinds of marker for legitimacy. W e rarely find departments or pedagogical methods based
on the premises of a taxonomy that organises information in an alternative to history and
'great men'. In contrast, Maciunas' Learning Machine reworks the frames of reference for
organising knowledge; it suggests alternatives to disseminating that knowledge; and it can
function as a generative device to produce knowledge structures through interaction within
and among our frames of reference. These interactions (for example, asking w h y orgies and
wars are included as art and design) suggest more than a semiotic reading of culture as
designed. It suggests that culture and taxonomies are open to art and design. It suggests
that in an open exchange of knowledge, even nonsense m a y play a crucial role in learning.
And it suggests that those w h o risk nothing, those w h o give no part of the self to the
learning experience will never understand either Uology or fluxography. Fluxus wanted to
make conceptual cognitive m a p s more mobile. O n e way to do that was by inventing kits
and boxes that directly addressed these conceptual issues, and by inventing tools like the
Learning Machine.
Another important transition to Fluxus laboratory experiments are the Fluxus film
works. Fluxfilms set out to reinvent the wheel. That is, Fluxus invented a protocinema within
a mass-produced industrial mechanism in order to ask what would have happened if the
history of film had taken a different route. Like Maciunas' graphic design, thefirstFluxus
films focused on the m o m e n t when modern industrial production had not yet institutiona-
lised popular culture. Dick Higgins describes Maciunas' choice of type style - 'extremely
ornamental type faces, such as Romantique' - as 'deliberately archaic'.22 Fluxus went back to
the protocinematic experiments of Edweard Muybridge and the cinema'sfirstdecade for
models of film-making. In doing so, Fluxus film-makers desedimented the perceptual and
cultural experiences n o w buried by Hollywood's m o d e of film-making.
144 C R A I G S A P E R
T o m Gunning explains that in the way these early films restructure both traditional
representations of space and 'the relation of spectacle to the audience w e m a y find a link to
avant-garde practice'.23 The same preoccupations of the early cinema and protocinema
appear in the Fluxusfilms.M a n y Fluxfilms are experiments in time and movement without
any narrative progression. These Muybridge-type experiments in time-motion studies -
stoppages in Duchamp's well-known terminology24 - suggest the same preoccupation with
travel, movement and movement-and-travel as change that w e have seen in other Fluxus
works. W e can see the Muybridge-like isolations of particular movements (and the effort to
capture the progression of time) in the Fluxfilm of Eye Blink, in Higgins' close-up film of a
mouth chewing, Ono's film of moving buttocks, or Paik's clear film accumulating dust.
In terms of the early cinema's use of short reels, Fluxus films often were film loops about
two feet long. Maciunas explored the possibility of a different history of cinema with his rope
in sprocketless projector. Craig Adcock explains that D u c h a m p understood 'that time could
affect artistic outcomes'. For example, the description of the ready-mades as 'instantane' or
'snapshots' suggests the effort to capture a m o m e n t of public taste from the flow of time. The
object implies the passage of time. In terms of the Fluxusfilms,Duchamp's 3 stoppages etalon
suggests more than the freezing of a m o m e n t in which string twists freely in the air to be glued
down as it lands. It is also a homophonic reference to Muybridge's serial photographs of a
horse galloping: one can translate etalon as both standard and stallion. Y o k o Ono's film of
buttocks moving does more than follow Duchamp's efforts to 'reduce, reduce, reduce' the
image to a single gag and Muybridge's effort to isolate serially a particular movement. Her film
also suggests another reference to the horse/stallion homophonic chain: her film is of an 'ass'.
The Fluxus laboratory teaches through the projection of a 'what if situation. In repeating
protocinematic experiments in the contemporary world, Fluxus artists do not m a k e a nostalgic
return to a phenomenological project of isolating animal and h u m a n movements. Instead, they
used the frame of reference of those earlier cinematic experiments to disrupt both the perverse
phenomenology of the Muybridge studies and the contemporary narrative cinema. After all,
there is a difference between Ono's film of moving buttocks and Muybridge's protocinematic
investigations of a horse galloping. Both focus on the isolation of a single movement, but the
content of thefilmsmakes the Fluxus work a corrosive joke and the Muybridge experiment
merely a document about an attempt to capture the truth of movement. Fluxus projected the
possibility of a cinema that would use 'the relation of spectacle to the audience' as a vehicle for
invention rather than mere description. With this possible use of media in mind, a concept such
as the Fluxus laboratory does not merely use machines as processors of information. It uses
them as provocations to learning - a learning machine.
For the Fluxamusement centre, John Lennon and Y o k o O n o designed or planned a series
of 'Dispensing Machines'. These included machines to dispense water (without a cup), sand
and glue, an endless stream of water, slugs (for money), and a crying machine that was to
dispense tears. Those machines led the way to the most important contribution to a
Fluxacademy, a learning machine. Y o k o Ono's Chewing Gum Machine Piece (1961), which
has word cards in a g u m machine, hints at h o w a learning machine might work. W e get a
more developed version of this possibility in George Brecht's Universal Machine (1976), a box
with m a n y diagrams and pictures printed on the bottom inner surface of the box. The
diagrams resemble nineteenth-century drawings from engineering and design manuals,
FLUXUS AS A L A B O R A T O R Y 145
physiology and medical manuals, and drawings of animal life. A number of objects (a golf
tee, marbles, plastic numbers, coiled string, and so on) are loose inside the box. T h e
directions explain h o w to use the machine:
for a novel: shake the box, open, chapter one. close, shake the box. open, chapter two.
close, shake the box ... for poems: substitute line one for chapter one, etc. For plays:
Actor one. For dance: movement one. For music: sound one. For event score: event one
... For biography: divide life into units, shake for each unit makes biography substitute
countries and m a k e histories; substitute religions and m a k e spiritual narratives;
substitute families and m a k e genealogies— 5. write question, put it in box, open,
conjunction of paper edges, words on paper, holes in paper with the objects and the
images of floor of box answers question 9. Are you sad ? Shake box. obtain joke. 10.
resolution of marital problems. 11. consider adding or subtracting objects; extending or
contraction images on floor of box. 12. For generating new languages, logics,
mathematics 15. Inventing. Consider any two elements in an existent relationship.
Replace either or both elements and/or the relationship using the Universal machine.
Consider repeating 18. Travel Itineraries.
The Universal Machine sets up a situation where the participant uses a series of variable
combinations to write novels, plays and biographies, solve problems, tell jokes, m a k e further
plans, or even change the parameters of the machine. T h efifteenthpossibility, 'Inventing',
explains a process that resembles the basic methods described above in terms of the
Fluxacademy. W h e n two elements have an 'existent relationship', then they both appear in the
same frame of reference. If one replaces one or both elements using an arbitrary constraint,
then the disrupted frame produces both the nonsense associated with learning through
decontextualising information and the interactions/intersections associated with a relay in-
transformation (or involution). The Universal Machine (a n a m e reminiscent of the early n a m e
for the computer) suggests a w a y to combine information not as part of a descriptive system (as
a cognitive work), but as part of generative interactions (as a postcognitive work).
A m o n g the other Fluxus publications, The New York Correspondence School Weekly
Breeder (1970) had strong connections to Correspondence Art. T h e Breeder's mailing lists
started years before the Breeder itself, elaborated from older Fluxus lists, later to serve as the
beginnings of the mail-art networks. K e n Friedman explains:
the Fluxus publishing ethos came directly into the realm of contemporary mail art was
in Amazing Facts Magazine ... a crudely assembled publication created at Fluxus West
[Friedman's base of operations] in 1968. W e gathered our mail, put it into a folio with a
cover, and sent it out. The idea lasted one issue, but established a notion of gathering as
the editorial principle of a magazine. 5
In 1970 Michael Morris and Gary Lee N o v a began Image Bank as a 'commercial images'
request list for mail artists and montage artists. It began using its extensive address list, and
by 1971 merged m a n y lists, including the huge list of 1400 names, addresses and phone
numbers that K e n Friedman began compiling in 1966. T h e list became the artist's directory
for the magazine F I L E w h e n Friedman visited Canada in 1972. Still later, Flash Art based its
Art Diary on Friedman's original list and Who's Who in American Art and Who's Who in
America were both expanded through selections from Friedman's lists. FILE's parody cover
of LIFE was produced by the General Idea Group. T h e lists distributed free helped
assembling editors to distribute international mail art through networks.
146 C R A I G S A P E R
Friedman notes that the Breeder was 'both a joke and way to establish regular, weekly
contact with other artists'. The work of Fluxus laboratory begins with a corrosive joke in
order to experiment with social networks. The most influential experiment in social networks
was the Correspondance School that the Breeder mentions in its full title. Ray Johnson,
considered by m a n y to be the central figure of early mail art, founded the N e w York
Correspondance School in the early 1960s. This became the source of overlapping variant
networks, such as Glen Lewis' Corres Sponge Dance School of Vancouver, started around
1970. Ed Plunkett, w h o actually coined the name, explains that 'it was a reference to the
" N e w York School," the leading group of mostly abstract painters that flourished then.'26
The type of work prevalent in the mail-art network always had a parodic connection to
the vanguard of abstract painting. M a y Wilson, w h o also participated in Johnson's School,
explains that, 'Correspondence is spelled correspondence ... the truth for Ray Johnson is not
correspondence to actuality (verisimilitude), but is correspondence of part to part (pregnant
similarities that dance).'27 Johnson's Correspondence Art has an implicit epistemology: a
fan's paranoid logic. H e used the corrosive joke about the art world and about the culture of
fans for artists and stars as a mechanism to explore as well as initiate, and participate in,
artists' networks. O n e chapter in m y larger book-length work on assemblings and networks
examines in detail the logic and systems involved in R a y Johnson's work. 28 His
Correspondence Art and 'on-sendings' were aligned with Fluxus, and his influence on mail
art throughout the world spread m a n y of the Fluxus concerns to a huge pool of participants,
One aspect of these socio-poetic works is that they take a bad situation and turn it into an
opportunity for experimentation. In the mid-1960s George Maciunas found himself trying to
continue to publish kits and boxes as well as contribute to Fluxus events in an extremely
difficult living situation. Maciunas' work in setting up artists' cooperatives in S o H o functions
as one of his most important works and an example of socio-poetic work. ThefirstFluxhouse
Cooperative was in the building at 80 Wooster Street that later became the h o m e of Jonas
Mekas' Film-Maker's Cinematheque. Maciunas purchased the empty loft building in 1967.
Hollis Melton explains that the city fought the formation of the Cinematheque as well as the
cooperative. In reaction, Mekas 'called a meeting of artists from the neighborhood' that led to
the formation of the S o H o Artists Association. They sponsored street festivals attracting
thousands of tourists. The city, realising the potential gain, eased its position, and in 1970
allowed artists to live in loft buildings. The term 'artists' loft' soon became a natural phrase to
describe a place where artists lived. Maciunas organised fifteen co-ops between 1966 and 1975.
H e used the logic of art to solve the problem of a living situation.
The Fluxus work Visa TouRiste (Passport to the State of Flux) (1966/77) was originally
proposed by K e n Friedman in the mid-1960s as a conceptual work that allowed entrance to a
state of mind Later Maciunas adapted this work to enable the bearer to 'pass freely and
without hindrance' into a Fluxfest. The state of mind for which Friedman was supplying the
passport was as delimited as the Fluxfest - you visited these states and left. O n e could argue
that this in some sense proved that the group still elevated art activity above everyday life.
Another reading merely suggests that the activities functioned as tests or experiments rather
than as an entrance into a 'new life style' or a social(ist) Utopia; that is, experiments are
always contingent, changing and in flux rather than continuous, stable, settled or decided.
The passport suggests an art in the sense of ars erotica, ars theoretica, ars politico: strategi
FLUXUS AS A L A B O R A T O R Y 147
that resemble the Situationists' call for experimental culture. Fluxus does not privilege art; it
sets aside a space for Fluxamusement such as a Fluxacademy - a transient space literally and
figuratively. It suggests an altered social relation, a different w a y to proceed. The passport
gives the bearer the right of entry to 'a country whose geography w a s a figment of the
communal imagination, whose citizenry was transient'.29
Robert Filliou's Permanent Creation (Instead of Art) (undated) explains to the participant
how to create his or her o w n territory. A n d , his Territory 2 of the General Republic, located in
a farmhouse outside Nice, dedicated itself to pedagogical research into genius and
'stupidology'. In this way, Fluxus connects the transient approach to invention that
resembles the p h e n o m e n o n of mail-art tourism. In fact, Filliou's use of the phrase 'eternal
network' to describe the inability of any one individual to k n o w everything in a single field
was the term later adopted by the mail-art community to describe their socio-poetic project.
They did not see the connection between the end of the coverage model of scholarship and
learning, but they saw in Filliou's phrase the possibility of forming their o w n virtual territory.
It is the geopolitical, and doubly geo-graphic, metaphor that attracted the mail artists. T o
form this territory, their work n o w represented a form of transient life that was, if not
tourism, then at least a sending-out of probes. Again, Fluxus provided keys to h o w to m a k e
art from this particular transience:
Larry Miller's interview with Maciunas appeared in a special issue of aV TRE dedicated,
posthumously, to Maciunas. 31 According to George Maciunas' system the 'a' before the title
' V TRE indicates that the project was initiated by N a m June Paik. This was a special issue of
V TRE, the Fluxus tabloid publication, produced after Maciunas had died. T h efirstfour
issues of V TRE include the prefix of 'cc' indicating that George Brecht was the primary artist
behind this endeavour. Later 'official' issues dropped this prefix, and Brecht appeared as co-
editor; George Maciunas was the driving force of these issues of V TRE.
Maciunas explains that Fluxus is 'more like a w a y of doing things'. H e goes on to
elaborate what this entails by repeating that 'Fluxus is gaglike ... a good inventive gag.
That's what we're doing.' In order for the gag-like element to work, objects and events must
have a very simple 'monomorphic' structure. In fact, w h e n one examines the issue of aV TRE
and the earlier issues of ccV TRE, they have a simple and immediate visual joke on
newspapers. N o t only the headlines and the news stories, but the organisation of the editorial
board, and the (dis)connection between the captions and the photographic illustrations.
Fluxus offers a w a y to reduce concepts and ideas to simple gaglike events or objects.
W h e n taken up by the audience (when they 'get it'), these deceptively small 'gifts' can lead to
many transformations. T h e reduction to a m o n o m o r p h i c structure obviously resembles
148 C R A I G S A P E R
Another decisive Fluxus element was the 'lightness and mobility of the material.' The
Fluxus artists were fascinated by the opening up of the simplest materials to the total
FLUXUS AS A L A B O R A T O R Y 149
contents of the world.... [Beuys]: 'Everything from the simplest tearing of a piece of a
paper to the total changeover of h u m a n society could be illustrated.'34
Robert Pincus-Witten explains h o w this simplicity works on the audience. H e writes that
'Fluxus makes ideas reachable through gags. Y o u can get it quickly'. H e also suggests one
obvious outcome for the effort to m a k e the ideas quickly accessible and available: 'By
designation, a Fluxus work must be cheap and mass-producible.'35 W h a t is amazing about
these works, and their importance for the Fluxus laboratory, is h o w they function to m a k e
the most particular (even autobiographical elements) into widely disseminated ideas. Beuys'
transformation of his autobiographical art intofirsta Fluxus programme and, from then,
into a grassroots participational political movement, and then into the Green Party, offers
the most obvious example of this transformation.36 Maciunas explains that Fluxus is 'more
like a way of doing things'. H e goes on to elaborate what this w a y entails by repeating that,
'Fluxus is gaglike ... a good inventive gag. That's what we're doing.'37 In order for the
gaglike element to work, objects and events must have a very simple 'monomorphic'
structure. Fluxus offers a w a y to reduce concepts and ideas to simple gaglike events or
objects. W h e n taken-up by the audience (when they 'get it'), these sapates, or deceptively
small gifts can lead to m a n y transformations like bits and pieces of Beuys' autobiography
later provoking the foundation of the Green Party. K e n Friedman explains h o w this quality
appears in Fluxus events:
There is an important distinction that George Maciunas drew between the sensibility of
the happening and the sensibility of the event. H e referred to happenings as 'neo-
Baroque' theatre, a phrase that summoned up the elaborate flourishes of European
Baroque architecture and music, as opposed to the concentrated, austere focus on
Japanese poetry and its architecture which was reflected in the event form that
Maciunas termed 'neo-Haiku theatre.' Y o k o O n o characterised this work as having an
'event bent,' while I created a term that caught both the meditation and the humour in
Fluxus pieces with the term 'Zen vaudeville.'3
As an example of this Zen vaudeville approach, a special Fluxus issue of Art and Artists
closes with one final Fluxus event score: 'When you are through doing every other event in
this magazine, take the paper to the roof, crumple it, throw it into the air, and see if it
becomes a cloud.'39 A social sculpture does not merely c o m m e n t on the production of art,
but also on the production of specific types of social networks. A s a forum for this extension,
one can consider Fluxus laboratory boxes, kits, and assemblings as the transition into, and
kitlike instructions for, the quintessential works of the twenty-first century: networked-ideas.
With Fluxus laboratory, the production and distribution systems become poems themselves.
One cannot 'read' these socio-poetic works the w a y one reads a phonetic poem, but one can
read these works as poetry on our current cultural situations.
NOTES
1 Robert Pincus-Witten, 'Introduction', in Jon Hendricks, ed, Fluxus Codex, Detroit, M I ,
Gilbert and Lila Silverman Fluxus Collection in association with Harry N Abrams, N e w
York, 1988, p 37.
2 Dick Higgins, 'Intermedia', in Higgins, A Dialectics of Centuries: Towards a Theory of
150 CRAIG SAPER
the New Arts, N e w York, Printed Editions, 1978, pp 12-17. Compare Stephen Foster
and Hans Breder, Intermedia, Iowa City, University of Iowa Press, 1979.
3 Eric Andersen, [untitled], Editions Et, 1.
4 Simone Forti, Handbook in Motion, Halifax, N S , N o v a Scotia College of Art and
Design, 1974, p 45.
5 Ibid., p 58.
6 Dick Higgins, 'Five Traditions of Art History: A n Essay' [ poster]. See also Lucy
Lippard, Six Years: The Dematerialisation of Art, N e w York, Praeger Publications,
1973. Lippard offers descriptions of various conceptual and Fluxus works during the
years 1966-71. For a broader context than Six Years, see also Adrian Henri, Total Art:
Environments, Happenings, and Performance, N e w York, Oxford University Press, 1974
7 Higgins, A Dialectics of Centuries, pp 20-21. Compare Richard Schechner, 'Happen
ings', Tulane Drama Review, vol 10, no. 2 (Winter 1965), where he argues persuasively
that happenings resemble scientific laboratory experiments.
8 K e n Friedman, 'Getting into Events', Fluxus Performance Workbook, special issue. El
Diarida, 1990, p 5.
9 Mary E m m a Harris, The Arts at Black Mountain College, Cambridge, M A , M I T , 1987.
Ray Johnson, founder of the N Y Correspondence School, attended Black Mountain
College as a student that summer and is often associated with Fluxus.
10 Buckminster Fuller, as quoted in Harris, The Arts at Black Mountain College, p 156.
11 Harris, The Arts at Black Mountain College, p 159.
12 George Maciunas, 'Prospectus for N e w Marlborough Centre for the Arts', [xerox;
unpublished].
13 Estera Milman, Fluxus and Friends: Selections from the Alternative Traditions i
Contemporary Arts Collection, Iowa City, University of Iowa, M u s e u m of Art, 1988,
p 7. Compare Victor Musgrave, T h e U n k n o w n Art Movement', Free Fluxus Now
Special Issue of Art and Artists, vol 7, no. 79 (Oct 1972).
14 Milman, Fluxus and Friends, p 5, citing George Maciunas' Fluxus Manifesto.
15 Aspen, vol 1, no. 8 (Fall/Winter 1968), designed by George Maciunas and edited by Dan
Graham (New York: Roaring Fork Press, 1968) [loose pamphlets and pages, boxed].
16 Erving Goffman, Frame Analysis: An Essay on the Organisation of Expertise, Bosto
M A , Northeastern University Press, 1986), p 375.
17 Ibid., p 382.
18 Ibid., p 399.
19 Ibid., p 408.
20 Michael North, The Final Sculpture: Public Monuments and Modern Poets, Ithaca:
Cornell University Press, 1985, p 136.
21 Compare George Maciunas, Expanded Arts Diagram [a poster/diagram charting out the
genealogy of Fluxus in terms of many other art movements].
22 Dick Higgins, 'Fluxus: Theory and Reception' in Fluxus Research, Special Issue of Lund
Art Press, vol 2, no. 2 (1991), p 37.
23 T o m Gunning, "An Unseen Energy Swallows the Space: The Space in Early Film and Its
Relation to American Avant-Garde Film', in Film before Griffith, in John L Fell, ed
Berkeley, University of California Press, 1983, p 356.
24 Craig Adcock, 'Marcel Duchamp's Tnstantanes": Photography and the Event
Structure of the Ready-mades', in Stephen Foster, ed, 'Event' Arts and Art Events.
A n n Arbor, M I , U M I Research Press, 1988, pp 239-66.
25 K e n Friedman, as quoted in Stephen Perkins, ed, Assembling Magazines, Iowa City,
Subspace Gallery, 1996, p 15. According to Peter Frank, the periodical Avalanche
shared the high production values favoured by Maciunas. See also Ken Friedman, T h e
Early Days of Mail Art', in Chuck Welch, ed, Eternal Network, Calgary, University of
Calgary Press. 1995, pp 2-16.
FLUXUS AS A L A B O R A T O R Y 151
Dada belongs to everybody. Like the idea of G o d or the toothbrush ... D a d a existed before
us (the Holy Virgin) but one cannot deny its magical power to add to this already existing
spirit.
Tristan Tzara, 'Authorisation, N e w York Dada', N e w York, 1921.
Long long ago, back when the world was young ... Fluxus was like as baby whose mother
and father couldn't agree on what to call it... Fluxus has a life of its o w n ... W h e n you grow
up, do you want to be a part of Fluxus? I do.
Dick Higgins, 'A Child's History of Fluxus', N e w York, 1979.
Of the many strategies for empowerment and historical positioning that Fluxus shared with
Dada, one of its self-proclaimed grandparents, the one that has the most consequential
ramifications for our o w n present is the recurrent insistence that each had identified a trans-
historical constant, or 'tendency', that stretched back through history and forward into the
future. For the Romanian Poet Tristan Tzara - Dada's most active impresario - the existence
of an ahistorical 'Dada state of mind', or 'spirit', facilitated the appropriation of like-minded
individuals, the most notable of w h o m was probably Marcel D u c h a m p , into the movement
and concurrently positioned a collective of dislocated war resisters within the mainstream of
the avant-garde tradition.
W h e n Tzara authored his N e w York 'Authorisation', he was still actively involved in the
construction of an art culture - an activity endemic to all twentieth-century avant-gardes.
However, by the second half of our century (and after the close of the second 'war to end all
wars'), Tzara and the rest of his surviving co-participants in international D a d a were
retroactively attempting to dismantle this ahistorical aspect of the D a d a myth; that is to say,
to recontextualise their activities within the historical realities of the First World W a r period.
For the most part, participants in the historical Fluxus have yet to follow suit.
In his 1921 m o c k authorisation of N e w York Dada, Tzara insisted that D a d a was 'not a
dogma or a school, but rather a constellation of individuals and of free facets'1 - yet another
strategy persistently employed by the Fluxus people, most of w h o m are adamant in their
insistence that Fluxus was not a 'movement'. Conversely, m a n y participants willingly
describe Fluxus as an overtly Utopian cultural space that facilitated the enactment of multiple
artistic agendas. For example, according to Wolf Vostell (orchestrator of 'De-Coll/Age
156 ESTERA M I L M A N
Happenings', sometimes active participant in Fluxus, and fellow traveller alongside Allan
Kaprow within the anti-Pop, overtly political. N e w York-based 'NO! art' or 'Doom'
collective), 'the positivity of Fluxus [gave us] the possibility of meeting each other and staying
together. Individually artists existed before and after, but for a few years they had the same
ideals, though not the same opinions,'2
As was the case for Dada, historical Fluxus served as a banner around which numerous
artistic, and sometimes activist, communities briefly coalesced. Milan Knizak (a founder
member of the Prague-based group Aktual, whose arrest in Czechoslovakia incited an
international roster of Fluxus participants to petition for his release) noted in 1977:
It was not the work of Fluxus that... we needed, but its very existence. When Aktual-
activity started ... we were completely isolated ... but knowing that somewhere [there
was] someone who was similar to us ... helped us a lot during that period.
Not only did Fluxus briefly unite a number of context-specific international constellations of
individuals, it briefly provided them with a Active country whose geography was a figment of
the communal imagination. During a 1985 conversation, I suggested as much to Alison
Knowles. In response to m y speculation that Fluxus was a kind of conceptual country that
'granted short-term citizenship to an international community of self proclaimed
cosmopolites [and] provided them with a nationality,'4 the artist enthusiastically replied:
And do you know another idea that's linked to that? I love it. It's Bob Watts' idea that
Fluxus could overtake existing institutions, the churches, the grocery store and of
course George's minesweeper; all of Fluxus gets on the minesweeper and goes around
the world. Alison pulverises thefishto make bread, someone else has the role of getting
the flags up to guide the ship. In a funny way it was a world of people. W e had our
mothers and fathers aboard in a sense. W e were a kind of Fluxus family ... That's
absolutely right. The world of Fluxus did exist somewhere.5
As was the case for historical Dada, Fluxus served as an interface among subsets of
geographically dispersed international art cultures. Despite their aggressively anti-art personae,
both the Dada collective and its paradigmatic neo-Dada counterpart was distinguishable from
majority culture communities because of their (sometimes veiled, yet recurrent) self-
identification as alternative art cultures. As a result, it can be convincingly argued that not
only were both fullyfledgedmovements (albeit of the anarchic variety), but that both were heir
to a number of other primary defining principles of the twentieth-century avant-garde.
The modernist concept of a cultural avant-garde was optimistically prophesised in 1825
by the French writer and diplomat Saint-Simon during a period of Utopian progressivism.
The artist was originally positioned within a cultural committee of socially conscious
individuals whose charge, mandated by the heirs of the Enlightenment, entailed a
collaborative attempt to move culture ahead to a better future. The artist was not only to
take his or her place alongside the scientist and the philosopher, but was understood, by a
society governed by idealism, to be particularly well-qualified to make substantial
contributions to the dissemination of the value structures of this new world.
By the early twentieth century, having long since become specific to literary and artistic
actions, the concept 'avant-garde' had come to be inseparable from the aesthetic basis of
community building and culturing. Thus, despite George Maciunas' oft-cited (and
strategically confrontational) 'rear-garde' posturing, in their critique of the institution of
FLUXUS HISTORY A N D TRANS-HISTORY 157
art and of larger cultural constructs, as well as in their recurrent commitment to the processes
of culturing, participants in historical Fluxus fulfilled a number of the same fundamental
prerequisites for membership in this venerated tradition of artistic activism as did their First
World W a r precursors in Dada. In view of the fact that the Utopian concept of a cultural
avant-garde and the modern discipline of history (understood as a socially progressive
branch of knowledge) were birthed one alongside the other, in their strategic attempts to
position themselves historically both D a d a and Fluxus fulfilled yet another.
Although conventional wisdom dictates that the avant-garde is by definition adamantly
anti-historical, both D a d a and Fluxus repeatedly assumed responsibility for the authorship
of their respective histories. For the most part, the numerous narrative histories penned by
the in-house historians of both movements were not dependent upon analytical, theoretical
or philosophical historiographic armatures. Positioned outside the active art-historical
discourse, these chroniclers of the marginalised often adopted modes of authorship more
closely aligned with the personal narrative, diary, genealogy, chronology or tale.
Nonetheless, through the composition and self-publication of these often transparently
agenda-bound testaments, these vernacular historians (perhaps inadvertently) challenge still
widely held assumptions about realistic history. M a n y of these well-authored historiographic
fictions further evidence the avant-garde's recurrent strategic preoccupation with its o w n
historical self-empowerment.
Tristan Tzara's Zurich Chronicle, 1915-1919 first appeared in print in Richard
Huelsenbecks' Dada Almanack (Berlin, 1920) and w a s later reproduced, in English
translation, in both Robert Motherwell's pivotal anthology, The Dada Painters and Poets
(1951) and in Hans Richter's 1965 edition of Dada Art and Anti-Art. Although the poet/
publisher's strategic 1919/20 account of purportedly 'historical' facts and events is arranged
in chronological order, the document serves multiple purposes as a nonsense p o e m and
manifesto. Interestingly enough, under the heading 'July 1917' Tzara asserts: 'Mysterious
creation! Magic Revolver! The D a d a Movement is launched' (emphasis mine). 6 The chronicle
welcomes Francis Picabia, 'the antipainter just arrived from N e w York',7 into the ranks of
the Zurich D a d a circle and strategically affiliates Tzara's o w n D a d a publishing activities in
Zurich with Marcel Duchamp's parallel, yet independent, N e w York-based iconoclasms. In
its celebration of 'Dschouang-Dsi [as] thefirstDadaist',8 the Zurich Chronicle concurrently
references what was to become one of Dada's most impactful strategies for historical
empowerment - the trans-historical constant w e have c o m e to identify as the D a d a spirit or
state of mind
In keeping with its author's role as one of historical Dada's most active publicist/
networkers, the chronicle closes with the (tongue-in-cheek) recounting that 'Up to October 15
[1919], 8590 articles on Dadaism have appeared in the newspapers and magazines of:
Barcelona, St Gall, N e w York, Rapperswill, Berlin, Warsaw, Mannheim, Prague, Rorschach,
Vienna, Bordeaux, Hamburg, Bologna, Nuremberg, Chaux-de-fonds, Colmar, Jassy, Bari,
Copenhagen, Bucharest, Geneva, Boston, Frankfurt, Budapest, Madrid, Zurich, Lyon, Basle,
Christiania, Berne, Naples, Cologne, Seville, Munich, R o m e , Horgen, Paris, Effretikon,
London, Innsbruck, Amsterdam, Santa-Cruz, Leizig, Lausanne, Chemnitz, Rotterdam,
Brussels, Dresden, Santiago, Stockholm, Hanover, Florence, Venice, Washington, etc. etc'
Dick Higgins penned his child's history of Fluxus some seventeen and a half years after the
158 ESTERA M I L M A N
[With most of the original artists represented], the superbly mounted Fluxus: A
Conceptual Country ... gives a clear multi-textured look at the movement's early d
... There's a fair share of Dada whimsy ... There is also a distinct if sporadic politic
edge ... reminders that the Vietnam War and the civil rights movement provided the
historical context in which Fluxus artists worked.
Cotter's immediate association of Dada with the whimsical makes direct reference to one
unfortunate side-effect of the process of decontextualisation prerequisite to the ascendancy of
the ahistorical construct - the 'Dada state of mind'. Although scholars of Dada have long
been aware that historical Dada was one of our century's most sophisticated, art-based, anti-
war movements, the lay public continues to respond to the 'magical power' of Dada's
purportedly trans-historical spirit. The consequence of the continued pervasiveness of this
myth (originated by the Dadaists themselves as a strategy for historical positioning) is that
the historical accomplishments of the movement have consistently been historiographically
disempowered. Leaving the potential ramifications of the parallel construct the 'Fluxattitude'
upon our understanding of historical Fluxus aside for the moment, let us turn instead to
Cotter's statement concerning the current exhibition's 'sporadic' reference to historical
Fluxus' political context.
FLUXUS HISTORY A N D TRANS-HISTORY 159
While not all participants in Fluxus held pride of place in the roster of activist and overtly
politically engaged artists of the period, most regularly assumed the long-standing avant-
garde responsibility to integrate art-making with cultural and socio-political criticism. I
would further like to posit that Fluxus' recurrent response to the political realities of its
present was by no means sporadic. Rather than cite numerous examples of activist works
realised by individuals centrally involved in the Fluxus circle I would rather turn, for a
moment, to one particular piece, responsibility for which falls to a collective of individuals
who can, within the current discussion, be best described as participants in the Fluxus orbit.
Bloodbath was an Action carried out in the lobby of the M u s e u m of M o d e r n Art by the
Guerilla Art Action Group (an affiliate of the Art Workers Coalition and one of the most
radical art activist groups of the Vietnam era), and publicised in Dieter Albrecht's Flug/Flux
Blattzeitung #12. The collective's manifesto of 10 November 1969, which was distributed
during this Action, was directed against 'people w h o use art as a disguise, a cover for brutal
involvement' in the war machine. T h e document served as an indictment of David
Rockefeller, Chairman of the Board of Trustees at M o M A , for his participation in the
production of napalm and for his position of power as Chairman of the Board of Chase
Manhattan Bank, a corporation purportedly collaborating with the Pentagon; and of the
Rockefeller brothers for their involvement in aircraft corporations and chemical and
biological warfare research. That the issues at stake were also art specific and responded to
traditional avant-garde Utopian assumptions about the role of the artist as cultural critic is
evidenced in the following statement included in the manifesto:
Those people have been in actual control of the Museum's policies since its founding.
With this power they have been able to manipulate artists' ideas; sterilise art from any
form of social protest and indictment of the oppressive forces in society; and therefore
render art totally irrelevant to existing crisis.
In the early 1960s A n d y Warhol was counted a m o n g the select group of neo-Dadaists to have
been singled out for membership in the newly delineated (and soon to be canonised) North
American Pop Art consortium. W h e n asked in 1963 if 'pop was a bad name', Warhol (who
160 E S T E R A M I L M A N
was to continue to maintain his affiliation with the underground through his loose-knit
association with some of the Fluxus people) replied:
The name sounds so awful. Dada must have something to do with Pop - it's so funny,
the names are really synonyms. Does anyone know what they're supposed to mean?...
Johns and Rauschenberg - Neo-Dada for all those years, and everyone calling them
derivative and unable to transform the things they use - are now called the progenitors
of Pop."
George Maciunas (Fluxus' primary impresario and master of ceremonies) opened his 1962
manifesto 'Neo-Dada in Music, Theatre, Poetry, Art' with the observation that 'neo dada, its
equivalent, or what appears to be neo-dada, manifests itself in very wide fields of creativity.'12
For Maciunas, what appeared to be neo-Dada was 'bound with the concept Concretism, [the
extreme conclusion of which] is beyond the limits of art, and therefore sometimes referred to as
anti-art, or art-nihilism'.13 In a 1992 letter to m e addressing m y reference in print to the choice
of the title 'Neo-Dada in der Musik' for one of the earliest Fluxus-related European concerts,
Higgins insisted that it was only because the proto-Fluxus community had no name, that they
'used Neo-Dada faut de mieux, though [they] knew it was inaccurate.'14
It is generally acknowledged that the resurgence of interest in Dada during mid-century
was responsible for a shared conviction a m o n g groups of artists that art activity must be
withdrawn from its special status as rarefied experience and resituated within the larger realm
of everyday experience. While it is true that by the early 1960s the rubric was regularly
evoked as a pejorative term by some formalist critics, what is rarely discussed is that neo-
Dada was concurrently considered to be coterminous with cultural and socio-political artistic
activism by other members of the art world.15 By 1963 such art writers as Barbara Rose felt
compelled to correct what they understood to be 'popular misconceptions that the new Dada
[was] an art of social protest [and that it was] anti-art.'16 Rose would also concur with many
of her colleagues w h o insisted that John Cage had provided a 'common origin [for diverse
practitioners of] the new dada.'17
In the late 1940s Cage had served as new music spokesman for the proto-Abstract
Expressionist circle. At the time the composer (who later served as mentor, not only for
Rauschenberg and Johns, but also for many of the North American participants in Fluxus,
including Higgins) was accused, by some of his more conservative contemporaries, of being a
'neo-Futurist'.18 By the early 1960s the venerated composer felt it necessary to respond to a
new set of pejorative assumptions about his dependency upon historical precedents. In the
process he described Dada as a free-floating, inherently malleable trans-historical constant,
the essence of which was embodied in Marcel Duchamp. O n the one hand, Cage insisted that
the Dada spirit remained capable of invigorating action in response to shifting contexts and
presents. H e concurrently let slip that, for him, the historical movement did not come into
being until after it had migrated to Paris:
Critics frequently cry 'Dada' after attending one of m y concerts or hearing one of my
lectures. Others bemoan m y interest in Zen. One of the liveliest lectures I ever heard was
... called 'Zen Buddhism and Dada' ... but neither Dada nor Zen is afixedtangible.
They change; and in quite different ways in different places and times, they invigorate
action. What was Dada in the 1920's [sic] is now, with the exception of the work of
Marcel Duchamp, just art.19
F L U X U S HISTORY A N D TRANS-HISTORY 161
On 13 December 1962 the Museum of Modern Art organised 'A Symposium on Pop Art'.
Although this event served as a pivotal moment in the art world's process of identification
and codification of an appropriate set of prerequisite defining terms for what has come to be
known as North American Pop Art, at this point in time the lines of demarcation among
those artists who were about to be canonised and those who were to remain outside
mainstream art-historical discourse had as yet not been set. In his introductory comments,
Peter Selz (MoMA's 'curator of painting and sculpture exhibitions') attempts to explain why
'Pop Art' was chosen over 'New Realism' as a descriptive term for the new phenomenon that
had recently spread from coast to coast. Selz further recounts that 'the term neo-Dada was
rejected because it was originally coined in the pejorative and because the work in question
bears only superficial resemblance to Dada [which] was a revolutionary movement primarily
intended to change life itself.'20 Contrary to Higgins' aforementioned assertion in 'Fluxus
Theory and Reception', a number of the M o M A panelists were in agreement that (unlike the
new art), historical Dada had mounted a conscious attack against conformity and the
bourgeoisie. They further concurred that, motivated by social passion, the movement had
launched a sophisticated attack on a society held culpable for the First World War I.
Although Cage is credited on more than one occasion as precursor to the new art, the
transcript for the 1963 session includes less than laudatory reference to Duchamp, who
served, in turn, as the composer's own mentor.
Having accused the new art of appearing to be about the real world, while at the same
time remaining dependent upon its sanctification through its 'fraudulent relationship [with
the] tradition of Dada', Hilton Kramer (then art critic for The Nation) continued:
But pop art does, of course have its connections with art history. Behind its pretensions
looms the legendary presence of the most overratedfigurein modern art: Mr. Marcel
Duchamp. It is Duchamp's celebrated silence, his disavowal, his abandonment of art,
which has here - in pop art - been invaded, colonised and exploited.
As had been the case for Kramer in the early 1960s, in his mUch-used introductory art-
history textbook, Norbert Lynton also felt compelled to adamantly defend 'art' against
contemporary iconoclasts. Toward that end, he offers his readers one seemingly eccentric
observation that perhaps inadvertently bears an uncanny stylistic resemblance to Higgins' 'A
Child's History of Fluxus'. In keeping with his normative role as custodian of the formalist
cannon, Lynton suddenly inserts the following cryptic repudiation into his otherwise
unemotional (and purportedly realistic) narrative history of our century:
Whatever infection Robert Motherwell's book on Dada generated in obscure places, it
was received in 1951 as an exceptionally interesting piece of history, an account of
strange, often nonsensical, and sometimes foolish things done a long time ago when the
world was very different.22
Motherwell had been quite happy to concur that to 'love art [was] a most anti-Dada
attitude'.23 He also admitted that his editorship of The Dada Painters and Poets was initially
undertaken in an effort to 'teach himself Surrealism [for which] Dada was the older
brother'.24 However, regardless of Motherwell's initial intentions, it was Surrealism's 'older
brother' which would capture the imagination of the next generation of art-makers. Contrary
to Lynton's assertion, the impact of Motherwell's anthology cannot be overestimated. By the
162 ESTERA M I L M A N
late 1950s and early 1960s the term neo-Dada had come to encompass the production of
Cage and his disciples Johns and Rauschenberg, the soon-to-be canonised American Pop Art
circle, Happenings, N e w Realism, 'Common Object Art', the overtly political, anti-Pop 'NO!
art' group and the Fluxus collective, among others.
From an historiographic perspective, it is important to remember that, as a result, the
contemporary art world of the late 1950s and 1960s was effected not so much by historical
Dada as by the end results of long-standing strategies for historical positioning employed by
members of the movement as they repeatedly attempted to write their own histories (another
strategy persistently adopted by Fluxus people). Thus, in m y essay 'Historical Precedents,
Trans-historical Strategies, and the Myth of Democratisation', which appeared in the
exhibition catalogue Fluxus: A Conceptual Country, I deliberately chose to concentrate
excerpts from the myriad personal narrative histories of Dada that appeared in Motherwell's
anthology. In so doing, I was provided with a rare occasion to investigate the extent to which
a particular historical subject had accrued verifiable access to one of its self-proclaimed
historical paradigms. In the process I was able to chart some of the uncanny coincidences
between the birth of historical Dada and the birth of Fluxus and the shared characteristics of
the deliberately trans-historical constructs of the Dada myth and its mid-century counter-
part, the Fluxattitude. In his response to one of the sessions during the February 1993 Fluxus
Symposium at the A A Center, Higgins confirmed that m y methodological approach had
indeed been appropriate.
Dada was not widely discussed until the 1950s, thirty-five years after its inception;
without [people like] Robert Motherwell (whose Dada Painters and Poets was semin
to most of us) we would have had a hard time indeedfiguringout just what the Dadaists
had done, what they had achieved and what they had not managed.
In a statement that was originally circulated as an insert to the 1951 edition of Motherwell's
anthology, Tristan Tzara, who had been one of the individuals most responsible for
perpetuating Dada's trans-historical myth, adamantly attempted, with all of his poetic
prowess, to recontextualise the First World War movement, and thus to distinguish what he
then perceived to be historical realities from historiographic illusions:
When I say 'we,' I have in mind that generation which, during the war of 1914-18,
suffered in the very flesh of its pure adolescence suddenly exposed to life, at seeing the
truth ridiculed, clothed in cast off vanity or base class interest. This war was not our
war; to us it was a war of false emotions and feeble justifications. Such was the state
mind among the youth when Dada was born in Switzerland thirty years ago ... A
product of disgust aroused by the war, Dada could not maintain itself on the dizzy
heights it had chosen to inhabit, and in 1922 put an end to its existence.
Contemporary cultural historians have posited that the romantic revolution of the 1960s
represents the legacy of early twentieth-century Utopian anarchic radicalism, which in turn
encompassed a loose-knit international collective of contemporaneous cultural avant-
gardes then associated with anarco-individualism. It has further been suggested that at that
point in time, artistic activism and political radicalism were understood to be two sides of
the same coin. In much the same way that historical Dada embodied all prerequisite
characteristics for membership in this early-twentieth-century Utopian consortium, it could
convincingly be argued that historical Fluxus served as one paradigmatic example of its
FLUXUS HISTORY A N D TRANS-HISTORY 163
legacy. In his 1988 introduction to Jon Hendricks' Fluxus Codex, Robert Pincus-Witten
argues that Fluxus' iconoclastic agenda was offered as a critique of an imperialistic,
Vietnam-era value system, and that the collective's achievements 'were inflected by an
idealistic anarchy [that evokes] a political history reaching back to the Wobblies, the
Patterson Strike, and the Feminist model of E m m a Goldman.. .'26 In his foreword to the
Codex, Hendricks (one of the founder members of the Guerilla Art Action Group and a
fellow traveller in Fluxus) attempts to contextualise the historical movement by describing
it as successor to a subversive counter-culture initiated in response to the McCarthyist
1950s27 and lists what he understands to have been Fluxus' historical precursors. After
allocating equal credit to Futurism, D a d a and Russian Constructivism, Hendricks posits
that these historical models were particularly appropriate because 'the essence of each
remained taboo in the late 1950s and early 1960s'.28
Of the three early-twentieth-century avant-gardes cited by Hendricks, it is D a d a that has
recently been singled out for the most thorough historiographic reassessment. Furthermore,
as our century draws to a close, cultural historians have identified D a d a as one of the most
appropriate sites from which to establish a genealogy of twentieth-century artistic radicalism.
As one of historical Dada's most direct descendents (and having, in its o w n right, captured
the imagination of our present), perhaps it is time for Fluxus to rethink its initial anxiety
about openly acknowledging its familial relationship to its venerated progenitor.
As was the case for historical Dada, Fluxus consciously and repeatedly attempted to
author its o w n history. That such should be the case is not surprising in view of the fact that
the modernist construct, the avant-garde, and the modern discipline of history were birthed
one alongside the other. Participants in the movement concurrently adopted a deliberately
ahistorical posture dependent upon the purported existence of a universal Fluxattitude.
Although originally invented as a strategy for historical positioning, it could easily be argued
that the trans-historical construct has successfully pervaded our contemporary consciousness
far more effectively than has any awareness of its historical counterpart. For example,
included in the packet of mementoes generated upon the occasion of the Walker Art Centre's
celebration of the 'Spirit of Fluxus' were three buttons. O n e proclaimed that 'Art is easy', the
second lauded an 'Art you can lick' and the third bore the instruction: 'Demolish serious
culture.' Under the sub-heading 'Demolish serious culture', the calendar for the Walker
celebration (upon which these buttons were affixed) announced that a Reflux watch with a
'Fluxus Aztec logo, gold-tone hands and case, a leather strap, quartz movement, and a
stainless steel back' was available for purchase in the Walker Centre bookshop. One could
argue that such marketing strategies confirm what Alison Knowles has described as Robert
Watts' idea that Fluxus could overtake existing institutions, the churches, the grocery store,
etc. However it is far more plausible that, by helping us forget that the initial charge to
demolish serious culture was a strategic and context-specific response to then-in-place
historical imperatives, such evocations of an ahistorical state of mind undermine the
collective's hard w o n (and long overdue) rightful inclusion in our century's historical roster
of venerated activist Utopian art cultures. The Fluxus spirit is a well-written fiction authored
by participants in historical Fluxus. Perhaps it is time for the Fluxus people to adopt yet
another strategy assumed by their D a d a precursors and to accept the full implications of the
fact that when historical accomplishments are consistently decontextualised they become
164 ESTERA MILMAN
reasonable candidates for recontextualisation into any new reality that a particular present
deems appropriate.
NOTES
1 Tristan Tzara, 'New York Dada', in Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray, eds, New York
Dada (April 1921) A facsimile of this little magazine appears in Robert Motherwell, ed,
The Dada Painters and Poets, N e w York, Wittenborn, Schultz, Inc, and Cambridge
M A , Harvard University Press, pp 214-18.
2 Wolf Vostell interviewed by Giancario Politi, Flash Art, nos 72-3 (March-April 1977);
reprinted in Flash Art, no. 149 (Nov-Dec 1989), p 102.
3 'Interview with Milan Knizak.' Flash Art, nos 72-3 (March-April 1977) reprinted in
Flash Art, no. 149 (Nov-Dec 1989), p 104.
4 Estera Milman, 'Road Shows, Street Events, and Fluxus People: A Conversation with
Alison Knowles', in Milman, ed, Fluxus: A Conceptual Country, Rhode Island, Visible
Language, 1992, no. 98. This author's definition of Fluxus as a conceptual country was
precipitated by Ken Friedman and George Maciunas' Visa TouRistE: Passport to the
State of Flux - a piecefirstproposed by Friedman in 1966 and realised by Maciunas in
1977.
5 Ibid.
6 Tristan Tzara, 'Zurich Chronicle, 1915- 1919', in Hans Richter, Dada Art and Anti-Art,
London, Thames and Hudson, 1965, p 226. Tzara is referring to the appearance in print
of thefirstissue of the little review Dada, for which he served as editor.
7 Ibid.
8 Ibid., p 227.
9 Ibid., p 228.
10 Dick Higgins, 'Fluxus Theory and Reception', paper presented during 'Fluxus: A
Workshop Series. The University of Iowa's Alternative Traditions in the Contemporary
Arts' (April 1985), unpaginated. Although this essay has appeared in print, I have
chosen to refer to the manuscript that the author sent me.
11 Andy Warhol, 'What is Pop Art? Interviews with G R Swenson', Art News, vol 62, no. 7
(Nov 1963), p 61.
12 George Maciunas, 'Neo-Dada in Music, Theatre, Poetry, Art', (cl962), reproduced in
Clive Phillpot and Jon Hendricks, eds, Fluxus: Selections from the Gilbert and Lil
Silverman Collection, N e w York, The M u s e u m of Modern Art, 1988, p 27. The
manifesto was presented by Artus C Caspari in Wuppertal, on 9 June 1962.
13 Ibid.
14 Dick Higgins to the author, '4 October 1992, Buster Keaton's Birthday [1898]'.
15 See, for example, Edward T Kelly, 'Neo-Dada: A Critique of Pop Art, Art Journal, vol
22, no. 3 (Spring 1964).
16 Barbara Rose, 'Dada Then and Now', Art International, vol 7, no.l (Jan 1963) p 24.
17 Ibid., p 27.
18 See Estera Milman, 'Futurism as a Submerged Paradigm for Artistic Activism and
Practical Anarchism', South Central Review: A Journal of the South Central Modern
Language Association, vol 13, no. 2 - 3 (Summer/Fall 1996), pp 157-79.
19 John Cage, Silence: Lectures and Writings, Middletown, Wesleyan University Press
1961, pxi.
20 'A Symposium on Pop Art', Arts Magazine, vol 37, no. 7 (April 1963) p 36
21 Ibid., p 38.
22 Norbert Lynton, The Story of Modern Art, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, Prentice-Hall 1980,
p 319.
F L U X U S HISTORY A N D TRANS-HISTORY 165
23 Max Kosloff, 'An Interview with Robert Motherwell', Artforum, vol 4, no. 1 (Sept
1965), p 37.
24 Ibid.
25 Dick Higgins, Respondent's statement, 'Flux-Forum Symposium', Walker Art Centre,
13-14 February 1993, manuscript version, unpaginated.
26 Robert Pincus-Witten, 'Fluxus and the Silvermans: A n Introduction', in Jon Hendricks,
Fluxus Codex, N e w York, Abrams, 1988, p 16.
27 Hendricks, Fluxus Codex, p 22.
28 Ibid.
STEPHEN C FOSTER:
HISTORICAL DESIGN AND SOCIAL PURPOSE:
A NOTE ON THE RELATIONSHIP OF FLUXUS TO
MODERNISM
W h a t interested m e about
Fluxus was that it had a
sharp, crisp approach to
culture.1
Ken Friedman
I would like to venture that Fluxus can be, and frequently has been, successfully understood
for what it was, what it became, the metamorphosis by which it successively became, and its
means of becoming all these things. Scarcely a shocking proposition, what appears to be its
logic (the logic of 'it') has become a truism in the literature on modern art and reflects, in the
curve of its development, the historical or, more accurately, the historiographic, m o m e n t u m
of the avant-garde. W h a t a thing was, although liberally discounted as 'absolute' truth,
nevertheless defines the base upon which one analyses what it became and the characteristics
and historical parameters guiding what it successively became. H o w it became what it was is
typically imputed to the actions and intentions of those responsible for what it became or
successively became. Seen as a whole, these propositions describe the directionality of an
overarching historical design for the progress of modernism of which the avant-garde
becomes a specific case.
Fluxus had made lasting contributions to our thinking about art and culture ... had
enduring value.2 Jean Sellem
The aims of Fluxus, as set out in the Manifesto of 1963, are extraordinary, but connect
with the radical ideas fermenting at the time.3 Clive Phillpot
Fluxus had its antecedents in those enlightened, earlier twentieth-century artists who
wanted to release art from the moribund constraints of formalism.4 Jon Hendricks
The purpose of this chapter is to pose some questions concerning the relationship of
Fluxus to this scheme of things; its alteration of the scheme, acceptance of it or rejection of it.
In posing the questions, the point is not to determine the correct answer (Fluxus is avant-
garde, modern or whatever) so m u c h as it is to formulate sensible means for answering the
questions; that is, h o w can w e k n o w if Fluxus is modern, avant-garde or whatever?
HISTORICAL DESIGN A N D SOCIAL P U R P O S E 167
N o w , of course, there are and have always been enormous problems with this modernist
scheme, but none of an order that has prevented it from working (at least until very recently)
for approximately two centuries. Even recently, criticism of it has been more probing than
effective. It would be easy to level well-warranted criticism at those proposing that Fluxus be
understood as a 'real' thing, to dismiss its successive 'realities' as illusions of an illusion and
to convincingly demonstrate that 'how' it became should not imply 'what' it became. Yet,
since the model has been, and surprisingly enough remains, operational, it is not altogether
clear what purpose the criticism would serve. As Arnold Isenberg noted long ago concerning
normative models of criticism, its internal contradictions not only failed to prohibit its use,
but had no significant bearing on its effectiveness as a means of analysing critical
communication.51 would say much the same for the question under consideration here.
I think Ken Friedman implies as much when he claims, 'When the work being done on
Fluxus by trained historians - art historians, cultural historians, anthropologists - is more
complete, you'll see the diversity of views brought forward in much greater clarity than the
unity implicit in Jon's [or other existing] books'.6 In our particular case, and in specific
reference to Fluxus, one might reasonably maintain that understanding and criticism of
traditions as movements, historically substructured as 'real' things, although fraught with
hopeless historical, theoretical, moral, ethical and other problems, continued to work. This is
true in spite of the group's denial of modernism and the avant-garde, and in spite of the
group's clear recognition of their reasons for rejecting them:
There's certainly interest in it [Fluxus] as an historical movement, but many of the
artists themselves don't want to look at it historically.7 Bruce Altschuler
Promote living art, anti-art ... George Maciunas
Definitions, especially the definitions of art history, seem to work the best on dead
subjects. It's easier to bury Fluxus and to set up a three-sentence epitaph on our
headstone than to understand what Fluxus is or was.9 Jean Dupuy
Fluxus objective are social (not aesthetic) ... and concern [themselves] with: Gradual
elimination offinearts .. .10 George Maciunas
Having said this, however, it is nevertheless true that some Fluxus artists invoked these
schemes again and again:
O n one hand, Fluxus appears to be an iconoclastic art movement, somewhat in the
lineage of the other such movements in our century - Futurism, Dada, Surrealism, etc.
And, indeed, the relationship with these is a real and valid one.11 Dick Higgins
Fluxus is a permanent state of improvisation - it doesn't matter what, it doesn't matter
how, it doesn't matter where and, most important of all, no-one should really know
what it is is an error.12 Marcel Fleiss
To the extent that any contemporary group would continue to use this modernist scheme, as
I maintain that Fluxus did, at least in certain important ways, an explanation is demanded.
That is, why would a group maintain the historiographic structures of modernism, modern-
istically refute its content, and still consider itself detached from modernism? I believe that
Fluxus, to a significant degree, behaved in these ways and for what I think are fairly
definable purposes.
168 STEPHEN C FOSTER
or the avant-garde rests not in the specifics of the terms but precisely in their organisation.
That Fluxus is modern or not rests less on the use of the specific terms than the specific use of
the terms. As the use of modernism's terms struck or strike confirmed modernists as illogical,
it would seem that this could only be accounted for by comparison with the modernist canon
as it was conventionally organised; for a number of reasons, however, even this is not
altogether clear.
The problem concerns whether modernism would have assessed Fluxus' use of its terms as
illogical, or merely idiosyncratic or misunderstood. The source of the organisation of terms
that constituted the modernist canon were located in its concept of history. To the degree
that Fluxus maintained that concept, there was a misunderstanding of sorts. But it must also
be said that it was a misunderstanding of rather little consequence since modernism easily
tolerated minor abuses of this sort and would have viewed it as little or no threat to the
fundamental basis of its historical design. 'It is to falsify history to describe Fluxus as an art
movement', wrote Eric Andersen.16 Because of Fluxus' acceptance of the history, the canon
was never fully raised to a level of visibility as a question.
If Fluxus rejected anything, it would seem to be the system or structure of the modernist
programme or project, but in a way that required saving modernism's programme, in part,
for maintaining the group's operational objectives (a point I will return to later), objectives
that should not be confused with the more straightforwardly transactional basis of the
historical work Fluxus so often claimed as part of its genealogy (Dada and Constructivism,
for example).
This gets us somewhat further because it implies that in Fluxus there was a separation of
means and ends untypical of modernism and the avant-garde as we normally understand
them - considerations that bring us closer to identifying their substantial rather than
polemical separation from modernism and the avant-garde. Fluxus seems to dislocate
traditional 'means and ends' relationships that are endemic to modernism and the avant-
garde and that account, in large part, for their curve as it was represented at the beginning of
this essay. If Fluxus wished to accomplish something, it was not embodied in the ends
implied in its means. I would suggest, in fact, that Fluxus represents a unique situation where
both 'means' and 'ends' serve equally as objectives or goals - objectives that were historically,
within the context of modernism, reserved only for ends. Nominally anti-art, and part of the
late-modern resistance to the 'art object', Fluxus sought appreciation and engagement in its
means. Self-conscious of its historical place, it sought its significance and position in its ends.
The importance of this lay in the non-dependent relationship between the means and ends
and the respective audiences that supported the objectives attached to each. Position was no
longer contingent on appreciation; significance on engagement, and so on. Engagement and
significance, for example, could be equally achieved, but in totally unrelated ways.
What is true of its strategies is true of its works (more or less the same thing). They affirm
modernism and the avant-garde; they deny it, manipulate it, embrace it and shun it. Most
importantly, they undermine the legibility of its canons and the relationship posed between
art's means and ends:
the creativity, the lightness, the rethinking of culture, of our approach to life are the
context in which Water Y a m takes place and from which it emerges.17 Ken Friedman
170 STEPHEN C FOSTER
[Fluxus] A n attitude that does not take to the decisions made by history as the
guaranteed and the guaranteeing process of the fluxes and the movements of creation.18
Achille Bonito Oliva
All this also broke apart the normal discourse levels through which the group was
approached. N o longer concerned with means and ends, criticism could be conceived around
either, with no loss to either: 'Fluxus encompasses opposites' wrote George Brecht. 'Consider
opposing it, supporting it, ignoring it, changing your mind '19 Indeed, with luck (and it wa
almost inevitable with the variety of critical models in service) criticism of Fluxus would be
substructured variously by consideration of both means and ends and exist on what
amounted to a non-competitive basis. The same was true of historical approaches. Indifferent
to its location in the street, alternative space, or museum, the historiographic mandates of
modernism yielded to a highly permissive situation where it was difficult to be wrong. Yet -
and this is important - Fluxus was always prepared to claim that it was only a half-truth. The
cleverness of Fluxus was that it was the only party to play all the possible positions
simultaneously (if not by any one particular individual, at least by the group considered
collectively). With means and ends unrelated, Fluxus could be m a d e modern, partially
modern or anti-modern. Its artists and critics could easily, and without contradiction,fillthe
pages of a xerox magazine, Artforum, or an Abrams Corpus. They could fight among
themselves, appropriate individuals into their ranks w h o could not have been otherwise
available, and expand in an indefinite number of future directions - all with equal impunity
from the critics and historians. In the hands of the right writer, they could be, and no doubt
are being, m a d e suitable for textbook discourses. There is no threat in any of this, because
there is always a way out. As Robert C Morgan has written, 'What is significant in a Fluxus
exhibition is the diversity of strategies and the complementary nature of the varied artists'
intentions'.20 F r o m the point of view of the modernist, the position m a y seem irresponsible,
F r o m the point of view of Fluxus, it is versatile and operational.
I think there are some interesting conclusions to be drawn from all this - that is, that Fluxus
was not at all necessarily anti-art, anti-purpose, anti-institution or anti-modern. It could, of
course, equally well be all of these. Fluxus, however, was decidedly not anti-historical, and this
seems to be a position that was not reversible in spite of hopeful opinion to the contrary:
To push Fluxus toward the Twenty-first century means to grasp the group's anti-
historicist spirit.21 Achille Bonito Oliva
To go towards the year T w o Thousand thus means to carry out a new task, that of
avoiding defeat by time.22 Achille Bonito Oliva
The group could reject modernism and its historical design but not its history. By tha
that the various, weighty and contradictory options to which Fluxus willingly and happily
submitted remain, without exception, historically conceived options. In the separation of
means and ends, Fluxus lost the authority to convincingly author itself, or to have others
author it in its o w n image. 'By creating an absence of authorship,' Morgan writes, 'Fluxus has
revived itself as a significant tendency in recent art'.23 The relationship of Fluxus to modernism
remains ambiguous only insofar as it m a y or m a y not be modern. But the 'means' of being
made one or the other is distinctly modern. History is a modern phenomenon, and anyone
submitting to it becomes, to some extent, a subject of modernism. Since this is the case, any
HISTORICAL DESIGN A N D SOCIAL PURPOSE 171
proposition that Fluxus radically separated itself from modernism is substantially weakened.
In closing, I a m left, and leave the reader, with a slightly puzzling question. H o w much of
all this was deliberate, planned or expected? Is contemporary Fluxus a rationalisation of an
early misunderstanding, or is it the fruits of a sophisticated, Duchampian refusal to commit?
It seems to m e that the question is related to why Fluxus, as modernism (as opposed to the
other options), seems to have w o n the day. Although it could be, and surely will be argued,
that Fluxus was simply assimilated, absorbed and appropriated by an insensitive, voracious
art world and its publics (the solace of all failed radicalisms), I would maintain that Fluxus,
from the beginning, was never in a position to determine its fate otherwise. Its flirtation with
history firmly secured its place in modernism.
NOTES
1 Jean Sellem, Twelve Questions for Ken Friedman', in Fluxus Research, Special Issue of
Lund Art Press, vol 2, no. 2, (1991). p 95.
2 Jean Sellem. 'Fluxus Research' in Fluxus Research, p. 5
3 Clive Philpot, 'Fluxus: Magazines, Manifestos, Multum in Parvo', in Clive Philpot and
Jon Hendricks, eds, Fluxus: Selections from the Gilbert and Lila Silverman Collection,
N e w York, M u s e u m of Modern Art, 1988, p 11.
4 Jon Hendricks, 'Introduction to the Exhibition', in Philpot and Hendricks, eds, Fluxus:
Selections ..., p 17.
5 Arnold Isenberg, 'Critical Communication', The Philosophical Review, no. 58 (July
1949), pp 330-44.
6 Sellem, Twelve Questions for K e n Friedman', p 104.
7 Bruce Altschulen, cited in Matthew Rose, 'Fluxussomething? Is There a Renaissance in
Fluxus or Just Boredom with Everything Else? A Survey of Fluxus in America', in
Fluxus Research, p 15.
8 George Maciunas, 'Manifesto' printed in Philpot and Hendricks, eds, Fluxus: Selections
..., p 2.
9 Jean Dupuy, 'Where' in Fluxusl, Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane, 1990, p 13.
10 George Maciunas, cited in Jon Hendricks, 'Introduction to the Exhibition', in Fluxus:
Selections ..., p 24
11 Dick Higgins, 'Fluxus: Theory and Reception', in Philpot and Hendricks, eds, Fluxus
Research, p 26.
12 Marcel Fleiss, 'Fluxus in Paris', unpublished typescript, no date [1989], p 1.
13 Maciunas, 'Manifesto', p 2.
14 Estera Milman, Fluxus and Friends: Selection from the Alternative Traditions in Alternative
Art Collection, Iowa City, University of Iowa M u s e u m of Art, 1988, unpaginated.
15 Maciunas, 'Manifesto', broadside, 1965; cited in Milman, Fluxus and Friends.
16 Jean Sellem, 'About Fluxus, Intermedia and So ... : A n interview with Eric Andersen',
in Fluxus Research, p 60.
17 Sellem Twelve Questions for K e n Friedman', p 95
18 Achille Bonito Oliva, 'Ubi Fluxus ibi Motus' in A Bonito Oliva et al, eds, Ubi Fluxus ibi
Motus, Venice, Biennale, and Milan, Mazzotta Editore, 1990, p 26.
19 George Brecht, 'Something about Fluxus', in A Bonito et al, eds, Ubi Fluxus ibi Motus,
p 144.
20 Robert C Morgan. T h e Fluxus Phenomenon', in Fluxus Research, p 125.
21 Oliva, Ubi Fluxus ibi Motus, p 26.
22 Ibid., p 27.
23 Morgan, 'The Fluxus Phenomenon', p 125.
NICHOLAS ZURBRUGG:
A SPIRIT OF LARGE GOALS': FLUXUS, DADA
AND POSTMODERN CULTURAL THEORY AT TWO
SPEEDS
I remember once, at one of the Kassel Documentas, walking over a square bit of
concrete sort of in the ground, with a circle of brass in the middle, which seemed to be a
very minimal, simple, beautiful little piece. But then, going into the museum, I
discovered that this was Walter de Maria's installation, and that brass circle was in fact
'A SPIRIT O F L A R G E G O A L S ' 173
a kilometre deep brass rod into the ground And all of a sudden, you know, the kind of
spatial dimensions and structural aesthetics of that piece exploded cerebrally!9
Over the years I have responded to Fluxus in somewhat similar stages, and never m o r e so
than to Personal Space (1972), a text by K e n Friedman that Ifirstencountered in Richard
Kostelanetz's anthology Breakthrough Fictioneers (1973), which also included - a m o n g m a n y
other works - a concrete p o e m that I had written entitled 'wind chasing dog', in which these
words read right to left, or left to right, around a rectangular structure. A pleasing extra-
linear realistic work, I had thought, having watched a dog chasing the wind, or chased by the
wind, on a hillside in 1971. But what could one m a k e of Friedman's Personal Space, which
advises the reader:
Immediately after reading this instruction, close the book. Strongly visualise two (2)
inches of space around the book in all directions. Fill this space with any ideas or
materials you m a y wish. This space is your Personal Space. A s such it is not only
personalised, but portable - that is, it m a y be unwrapped from around this book and
used anywhere ... R e m e m b e r when you set up this Personal Space to construct it
carefully so that it does not collapse.10
Undisturbed by the restricted poetic - or at least, semantic - space of 'wind chasing dog', I
wondered where the more conceptual spiral of Friedman's instructions actually led. If, as
Paik observes, 'Fluxus is a kind of minimal aesthetic', didn't Friedman's work typify the w a y
in which 'a minimal aesthetic, by definition, is not so easy to succeed in'?11 A n d if, as
Friedman remarks, 'Explosive humour' can be 'a tool for clearing ground', insofar as 'Good
nature, charity, h u m o u r from the deep spring of hope are the core of Fluxus', didn't the
slightly far-fetched quality of this work also confirm his warning that 'humour has sometimes
moved from a form of liberation to a kind of trap'?12
If it is the case, as Friedman remarks, that 'When Fluxus is nothing but jokes, it's difficult to
build on the cleared ground' - just as it is equally difficult to build helpful accounts of
contemporary culture, w h e n postmodern theory is nothing but jokes and self-deconstructing
wordplay - it seems evident that most Fluxus jokes function within rather wider dynamics,
reassessing tired conventions by provoking what Friedman calls the 'delicate interplay between
clearing and building that gives birth to social reconstruction'. Viewed in this context,
Zen time and vaudeville time are balanced by building and development. There is a
place for humour, a place for jokes in art. There is also a time to build, a time after the
'Sweeping Away'. The gate to Fluxus is open. It's a good time to contemplate first
principles.13
Far from simply offering a minimalist joke, Personal Space n o w seems to typify the w a y in
which Fluxus works prompt a m o r e maximal approach to 'first principles' and to 'richer
debate'. In Friedman's terms,
If the Fluxus aesthetic and the provocative register of Baudrillard's writings sometimes
appear to resist evaluation, this is surely because they both employ the same self-deflating
logic which initially typecast Dada as little more than an irritating joke.
Tristan Tzara's 'Dada Manifesto on Feeble Love and Bitter Love' (1920), for example,
taunts the reader with the apparently absurd suggestion that 'Dada is a dog - a compass - the
lining of the stomach', before rather more aptly claiming that 'Dada is a quantity of life in
transparent, effortless and gyratory transformation'.15 As Tzara indicates, Dada's anti-logic
invites conceptual transformation. Scratch a Dadaist or a Fluxus artist once and youfinda
nihilist. Scratch them twice, and more positive values appear.
Baudrillard's writings display similar ambiguities. Deploring the 'atrocious uselessness' of
contemporary existence, and declaring 'disgust for a world that is growing, accumulating,
sprawling, sliding into hypertrophy'16, Baudrillard sporadically defends what Tzara terms the
'gyratory transformation' of language, arguing, for example, that, 'What counts is the
singularity of ... analysis', as opposed to 'language that is maddeningly tedious and
demoralising platitudinous'.17 O n other occasions, Baudrillard damns his own insights with
faint praise as 'an intelligence without hope'.18 By contrast, both Dada and Fluxus tend to
evince intelligence with hope, or in Friedman's terms, 'the power of unrealistic goals, of
dreams and aspirations' pursued with 'whole-hearted integrity'.19
Of course, at their most provocative, Fluxus texts rival even Tzara's nihilism, repudiating
both high art and Dadaist anti-art. Noting that 'Dada said to hell with serious art', and that
'today Dada is serious art', Ben Vautier amusingly concludes:
I am not interested in Dada historical maniacs.
I prefer a naked girl in m y bed to Dada.20
In much the same way, Baudrillard perfects the studied irreverence of the avowal: T don't
want culture; I spit on it.'21 Nevertheless, both Vautier and Baudrillard also sometimes share
the crucially affirmative postmodern impulse to emulate, elaborate and update the innovative
velocity of Dada's most transgressive and transformative energies, by generating the kind of
'magic' that Baudrillard associates with more or less privileged moments when 'you cause
things to exist ... by confronting them'.22 But at their most distinct extremes, Fluxus
practices and postmodern cultural theory differ in terms of their self-confidence and their
commitment to positive change. While most postmodern cultural theorists envisage the
present as (to return to Dickens) 'a season of Darkness', most Fluxus artists maintain faith in
'the spring of hope'.
For Dick Higgins, for example, T h e very name, "Fluxus", suggests change, being in a
state offlux',and reflecting 'the most exciting avant-garde tendencies of a given time or
moment - thefluxattitude.'23While sensitive to the 'frail' quality of such 'beginnings',
Higgins warns that 'it would seem unwise to dismiss them as impossibilities, simply because
they do not measure up to the achievements of the modernisms of the bulk of the twentieth
century, now ending'.24 Likewise, Emmett Williams evokes the Fluxus aesthetic in terms of
its aspiration 'to do things that we had never seen before, to make the kind of books that
simply didn't exist';25 and Friedman equates the Fluxus aesthetic with an 'unwillingness to be
told what sort of goals are too large'.26 Turning to the way in which its flexible goals
facilitated its collective survival, Paik cites Fluxus as 'one of the very few anarchistic groups'
'A SPIRIT OF L A R G E GOALS' 175
in which 'many different egos - twenty, thirty different artists - kept quite good friends and
collaborated'.27 Williams similarly finds Fluxus 'the longest-lived thing, in terms of an art
movement, in the twentieth century';28 and Friedman posits that 'no group of artists since the
Middle Ages has maintained a sense of community for such a long time'.29
Remarking that Fluxus is 'still making waves', as its successive festivals m a k e n e w ties,
and consolidate old alliances, Williams adds:
We've had quite a few of these reunions - w e had a great one in 1982 in Wiesbaden,
and two of them in '92 in Wiesbaden and Cologne, and then the one in Korea,
shortly after that, and wherever the great G e r m a n Fluxus show goes, there's a kind
of getting together too - last winter in Lithuania ... having first c o m e from Istanbul,
and going n o w to W a r s a w ... then Prague and Budapest. It just gets livelier and
livelier.
As Williams intimates, the fortunes of Fluxus typify the w a y in which the best of the
postmodern avant-gardes displace, replace and then eventually rejoin earlier traditions, initially
subverting 'nice classical education', and subsequently offering alternative classical repertoires:
W e often talk about that situation, you know, and when people say 'But this was
heralded as such a great experimental troupe during the sixties, h o w can you justify
doing what you did then thirty years later?', I cannot see w h y on earth not. I mean, I
can certainly see a situation where you could do Mozart and the Fluxus classics on the
same evening. After all, Mozart didn't stop after the second performance of a work, and
is there any reason w h y Fluxus should? No-one ever said of Fluxus, These are
spontaneous performances - you can only do it one time.' S o m e of us still do the Fluxus
classics because the pieces are strong and good, and audiences still like them and w e like
to perform them. M a y b e w e look funny u p there on the stage in our sixties and
seventies, but that's no reason to stop.31
For 'pure Fluxus', one must look to thefirstpieces of the late fifties and early sixties.
But just as M a x Ernst did not die with Dada, so Fluxus artists did not end with the self-
176 NICHOLAS Z U R B R U G G
consciously defined Fluxus 'tendency' ... Almost all the original Fluxus artists have
changed and evolved to do other work. 6
T h e heroic quality of the Fluxus aesthetic's openness to 'other work', and to the perils of
'frail' hybridity - (as opposed to the seductive security of well-defined 'purity') - seems still
m o r e admirable w h e n one considers the conservative fatalism of m u c h contemporary cultural
theory. Deploring this loss of nerve, Higgins reflects:
In times like this, there are really rather few people w h o have kept the faith, kept the
vision, and kept their nerve ... Although this is not a world in which everybody seems
to be doing all kinds of incredibly stimulating things, as they did, say, in the nineteen
sixties, although this world is basically somewhat of a down-world, it's probably
therefore a nexus point - some sort of transition point - towards whatever is going to
come next - hopefully a positive one.
W h e n I do artistic work ... I follow m y nose, and it has a tendency to lead m e out -
always out - of established intermedia ... towards trying the frontiers of this and trying
the frontiers of that. People are often dismayed, because what I'm working on simply
does notfitthe priorities which they've set for themselves.39
If suspicion of both old and n e w aesthetic priorities prompts Baudrillard to complain that
T h e m a x i m u m in intensity lies behind us; the m i n i m u m in passion and intellectual
inspiration lie before us',40 Fluxus artists rather differently complain of over-exposure to
different kinds of inspiration. Relating, for example, h o w he 'became ill over the matter when
... very young', before finally accepting that he could 'not stop working in all these different
media', Higgins explains:
I kept asking myself, 'Dick - you cannot possibly be serious? W h e n are you going to be
just a composer, or just a poet, or just a visual artist?' ... I realised that I couldn't
specialise, because every time I tried, I got depressed41
Baudrillard, by contrast, usually argues that ' W e shouldn't presume to produce positive
solutions',42 somewhat as Jameson insists that multimedia texts such as video art 'ought not
to have any 'meaning' at all'.43 A s N a m June Paik observes, academic chic seems to compel
incredulity towards creative innovation.
O f course all intellectuals are against technology, and all for ecology, which is very
important. But in a way, w e are inventing more pollution-free technology ... w e have to
admit that compared to Charles Dickens' time, w e are living better, no? So w e must give
up certain parts of intellectual vanity, and look at the good parts of so-called high-tech
research.44
Perhaps times are changing. A s Baudrillard indicates in his interviews of the early 1990s, his
writings are gradually acknowledging what Paik calls 'the good parts of so-called high-tech
'A SPIRIT OF L A R G E GOALS' 177
There's a sort of ethic in all this, a very deep ethic, even a m o n g the nastiest, and G o d
knows artists can be nasty ... they feel responsible for having to do something, they
don't k n o w exactly what, they're searching. They have considerable responsibility with
respect to what they feel themselves called to do ... A n d that's beautiful, it's a highly
moral model for a community to function in. That's w h y I've always thought that this
community in flight, inexistant, in perpetual conflict, is a sort of model - and of course
this community lives in anguish - 'Can I do it, can I measure up to this demand imposed
on m e from where I don't know, can I m a k e this instead of that, see if I can get sound
out of an old pot - what is art, what is painting, what is poetry - and orality, and
writing?' These questions are always with us, and cannot be perceived without a sense of
anguish, because they are grave questions. Amen. 4 9
W h a t they lacked was a real theory, a recognisable underlying structure with a clearly
marked goal. They held a mirror in front of people, without using it to lead to a
betterment of their condition. Despite this ... Fluxus actions had a value, because they
made ... conscious attempts to produce an important development'.53
what is only too intelligible' and spread 'the germs or viruses of a radical illusion'. Yet for
all its vital 'viral' rhetoric, Baudrillard's theory seldom identifies or inaugurates radical
'beginnings'. Advocating contamination by innovation, and then self-consciously lamenting
the implausibility of this ideal, Baudrillard frustratingly concludes: 'As for art... There must
be some meaning to it ... but w e cannot see what it is.'58
Cannot see, or cannot yet see? As Higgins emphasises, even though w e m a y not know for
sure where the 'beginnings will lead to', it is our responsibility to facilitate and follow the
fortunes of new possibilities, especially when their most positive 'speeds' seem likely to lead
beyond familiar postmodern cultural debates, towards wider, more challenging goals. Quite
simply, 'We are not just modern or postmodern today. W e are premillennarian, and it is up
to us and those w h o come after us to determine what that means.'59
NOTES
1 Jean Baudrillard, The Anorexic Ruins', in Dietmar Kamper and Christoph Wulf, eds,
Looking Back on the End of the World, N e w York, Semiotext(e), 1989, pp 33, 34.
2 Felix Guattari, 'Postmodernism and Ethical Abdication', Interview with Nicholas
Zurbrugg, Photofile [Sydney], no. 39 (July 1993), p 13.
3 Ken Friedman, 'Rethinking Fluxus' , in Nicholas Tsoutas and Nicholas Zurbrugg, eds,
F/uxusl, Brisbane, Institute of Modern Art, 1990, pp 2 3 ^ .
4 Ibid., p 26.
5 Beuys, cited in Gotz Adriani, Winfried Konnertz and Karin Thomas, eds, Joseph Beuys:
Life and Works, trans Patricia Lech, N e w York, Barron's, 1979, p 86.
6 Jurgen Habermas, 'Modernity versus Postmodernity', New German Critique, no. 22
(Winter 1981), p 7.
7 Jean Baudrillard, 'Fractal Theory', Interview with Nicholas Zurbrugg, in Mike Gane,
ed, Baudrillard Live, London, Routledge, 1993, p 171.
8 Andreas Huyssens, 'Mapping the Postmodern', New German Critique, no. 33 (Fall
1984), p 5.
9 Telematic Tremors: Telematic Pleasures, Stelarc and "Fractal Flesh"', Interview with
Nicholas Zurbrugg, in Anna Novakov, ed, Carnal Pleasures: The Public Spaces of
Desire, Seattle, W A , Bay Press (forthcoming).
10 In Richard Kostelanetz, ed, Breakthrough Fictioneers, Barton, Something Else Press,
1973, p 224.
11 N a m June Paik, Interview with Nicholas Zurbrugg, in Fluxus, Special Issue of Lund Art
Press, vol 2, no. 2 (1991), p 135.
12 Friedman, 'Rethinking Fluxus', p 19.
13 Ibid.
14 Ibid.
15 Tristan Tzara, 'Dada Manifesto on Feeble Love and Bitter Love' (1920); reprinted in
Seven Dada Manifesto, trans Barbara Wright, London, John Calder, 1977, p 43.
16 Baudrillard, T h e Anorexic Ruins', p. 31.
17 Jean Baudrillard, The Perfect Crime, trans Chris Turner, London, Verso, pp 119-21.
18 Ibid., p i 19.
19 Frideman, 'Rethinking Fluxus', p 26.
20 Ben Vautier, T h e D u c h a m p Heritage', in Stephen Foster and Rudolf Kuenzli, eds,
Dada Spectrum: The Dialectics of Revolt, Madison, W I , Coda Press, p 256.
21 Jean Baudrillard, 'Forget Baudrillard', Interview with Sylvere Lotringer, in Forget
Foucaull, N e w York, Semiotext(e), 1987, p 81.
'A SPIRIT O F L A R G E G O A L S ' 179
22 Jean Baudrillard, The Power of Reversibility That Exists in the Fatal', Interview with D
Guillemot and D Soutif, in Mike Gane, ed, Baudrillard Live, London, Routledge, 1993,
p44.
23 Dick Higgins, 'Fluxus: Theory and Reception', in Fluxus Research, Special Issue of
Lund Art Press, vol 2, no. 2 (1991), p 30.
24 Dick Higgins, 'Music from Outside', in Rene Block, ed, The Readymade Boomerang,
Sydney, The M u s e u m of Contemporary Art, 1990, p 138.
25 Emmett Williams, Interview with Nicholas Zurbrugg, in Positively Postmodern: The
Multimedia Muse in America, Washington D C , Maison Neuve, forthcoming.
26 Friedman, 'Rethinking Fluxus', p 26.
27 Paik, Interview with Nicholas Zurbrugg, in Fluxus Research, p 135.
28 Williams, Interview with Nicholas Zurbrugg, in Positively Postmodern.
29 Friedman, 'Rethinking Fluxus', p 17.
30 Williams, Interview with Nicholas Zurbrugg, in Positively Postmodern.
31 Ibid.
32 Renato Poggioli, The Theory of the Avant-garde, Cambridge, M A , Harvard University
Press, 1968, p 137.
33 Friedman, 'Rethinking Fluxus', p 23.
34 Raoul Hausmann, 'Dadaism and Today's Avant-garde', Times Literary Supplement, 3
September 1964, pp 800-801.
35 Marcel Janco, 'Dada at T w o Speeds', in Lucy Lippard, ed, Dadas on Art, Englewood
Cliffs, NJ, Prentice-Hall, 1966, p 38.
36 Higgins, 'Music from Outside', p 134.
37 Ibid.
38 Ibid.
39 Ibid.
40 Baudrillard, T h e Anorexic Ruins', p 40.
41 Higgins, 'Music from Outside'.
42 Baudrillard, 'Fractal Theory', p 170.
43 Fredric Jameson, 'Reading Without Interpretation: Postmodernism and the Video-text',
in Negel Fabb et al., eds, The Linguistics of Writing, Manchester, Manchester University
Press, 1987 pp 217-8.
44 Paik, Interview with Nicholas Zurbrugg, in Fluxus Research, pp 134-5.
45 Jean Baudrillard, Interview with Nicholas Zurbrugg, Continuum, vol 8, no. 1, (1994), p 4.
46 Felix Guattari, Chaosmosis: An Ethico-Aesthetic Paradigm, trans Paul Bains and Julian
Pefanis, Sydney, Power Publications, 1995, pp 90-91.
47 Jean-Francois Lyotard, Interview with Alain Arias-Misson, Lotta Poetica [Verona],
series 3, no. 1 (January 1987), p 81.
48 Ibid.
49 Ibid., pp 81-2.
50 Friedman, 'Rethinking Fluxus', p 13.
51 Beuys, cited in Adriani, Konnertz and Thomas, Joseph Beuys, p 87.
52 Ibid., pp 82-3.
53 Ibid., p 86.
54 Friedman, 'Rethinking Fluxus', p 21.
55 Paik, Interview with Nicholas Zurbrugg, in Fluxus Research, p 135.
56 Tristan Tzara, 'Lecture on Dada' (1920); reprinted in Herschell B Chipp, ed, Theories of
Modern Art: A Source Book by Artists and Critics, Berkeley, C A , University of
California Press, 1968, p 389.
57 Baudrillard, The Perfect Crime, p 121.
58 Ibid., p 147.
59 Higgins, 'Music from Outside', p 138.
PART IV
THREE FLUXUS VOICES
LARRY MILLER:
TRANSCRIPT OF THE VIDEOTAPED INTERVIEW
WITH GEORGE MACIUNAS, 24 MARCH 1978
Larry Miller: The main thing I wanted to talk about was the chart. I've sort of jotted down some
specific things that I wanted to ask you about it, some specific questions about the chart.
George Maciunas: M a y b e I ought to describe the general construction.
L M : Okay.
G M : So, you see, this chart is just a continuation of other charts I've done in the past for
other histories and basically the chart is - shows the vertical - er, the horizontal grid,
okay. In the vertical line is shown the years, and the horizontal layout shows the style.
So you can point on the chart any activity, pinpoint it exactly with this grid of time and
style. N o w it could also be time and occasion; for instance, I've done charts which
show, vertically is shown time and horizontally geographical location. This way you
could say any activity in the past, you could locate exactly on the chart where it
happened and when. N o w for this chart I chose style rather than location because the
style is so unlocalised and mainly because of the travels of John Cage. So you could
call the whole chart like Travels of John Cage' like you could say Travels of St. Paul',
you know? Wherever John Cage went he left a little John Cage group; which some
admit, some not admit his influence. But the fact is there, that those groups formed
after his visits. It shows up very clearly on the chart.
L M : Starting about when?
G M : Oh, starts from 1948. In France he visited in 1946 to 1948 and met Boulez, Shaeffer,
and, sure enough, in 1948 Shaeffer starts an electronic/music-concrete studio, without
giving any credit to John Cage, of course. Then he goes to Italy, then he goes to
Darmstadt, then to Cologne, everywhere he goes they start a little group or studio,
usually all electronic music. But at that time his influence was mainly that of musique-
concrete. In other words, using various fragments of everyday sounds for making new
music. Because hisfirstmusic concrete piece is 1939.
L M : Cage?
G M : Cage, that's right. So when the French come out in 1948 and they say they invented
musique-concrete that's just a lot of bullshit.
L M : Can I comment about that - remind you of something? R e m e m b e r when I went to ask
Cage about his editions?
G M : Yes.
184 LARRY MILLER
L M : H e said that they were particularly attached to that phrase, that term musique-concrete
and that he didn't mind that.
G M : Well, he's just being very tolerant. He's very tolerant even of people that just copy him
directly, like plagiarise, and don't give any credit to him. He's that kind of person, he's
just super tolerant. The fact is that, you know, everybody right and left is stealing from
him. N o w , but that doesn't mean that he [did not get] influences in return from others.
The chart, therefore, starts with what influenced Cage. Cage is definitely the central
figure in the chart.
L M : Yeah?
G M : Y o u could call that chart the Cage Chart. Not Fluxus Chart, but Cage.
L M : Okay, maybe w e can proceed if you ...
G M : So you startfirstwith areas, the movements that influenced him and that's very clearly
also outlined here. W e have the idea of indeterminacy and simultaneity and concretism
and noise coming from Futurism, theatre, like [the] Futurist music of Russolo. Then
we have the idea of the ready-made and concept art coming from Marcel Duchamp.
Okay, we have the idea of collage and concretism coming from Dadaists. N o w , you see
they're all shown on the chart h o w they all end up with John Cage with his prepared
piano, which is really a collage of sounds.
L M : Nineteen thirty-eight?
G M : Nineteen thirty-eight, yeah. A n d his musique-concrete, which is 1939. Then all his
travels are shown. Meanwhile, there's a parallel interest in this chart, and that is of all
what I would call happenings or Actions, to which two people contributed: John Cage
again in 1952, hisfirsthappening and the same year Georges Mathieu also did the first
Happening, called Battle of Boudine. A n d [an] interesting sideline is that Mathieu did
go to Japan and did this action and started off the Gutai Group. Georges Mathieu was
instrumental in starting the Gutai Group.
L M : His work I don't k n o w as well as others. Just describe something that ...
G M : H e made an Action of painting, like [a] Happening.
L M : Not like Pollock.
G M : N o , no ... It was a theatrical piece, more like Yves Klein.
L M : Like Klein's blue nudes? W a s the Gutai Group the group that shot bullets at the
paintings ...
G M : Yeah.
L M : A n d exploded ...
G M : Anyway, that's something that Mathieu would do. So Gutai was very close to
Georges Mathieu in the sense that they were doing paintings as Actions, much more
than Pollock. A n d you know, different from Yves Klein. The chart doesn't show
[the]contribution of Yves Klein, and that's where he should still be added on, that's
where the chart is incomplete. Yves Klein has to be given more prominence in [the]
1960s, which he is not. The other important figure is Joseph Cornell, starting in 1932.
N o w his influence sort of is connected to Surrealists and it shows h o w his influence
affects a lot George Brecht and Bob Watts, especially George Brecht. N o w with those
basic influences - of the action painting of Mathieu and first happenings of John
Cage and generally all John Cage, everything that he did in the '50s, plus Joseph
INTERVIEW W I T H G E O R G E M A C I U N A S 185
Cornell, plus there's a little influence here shown of Ann Halprin called Natural
Activities and Tasks.
L M : What would that be?
G M : That's in California. It had a lot of influence on people like James Waring and Bob
Morris and Simone Forti and La Monte Young and Walter D e Maria.
L M : This would be purely dance?
G M : N o , no. It's just what it says: natural actions and tasks.
L M : In other words the application ...
G M : ... sprang from dance tradition but you couldn't call that a dance. They were like very
natural acts you know, like walking.
L M : I see. Physical things that are outside of what you normally would consider dance, just
physical activities.
G M : Yeah, like walking in a circle.
L M : Like a readymade gesture.
G M : Yeah,right.So you can give La Monte Young with all of his short compositions of
1960 some credit of that to A n n Halprin's natural activities. Let's say his audience
sitting on the stage doing nothing. Okay? That's a natural activity, it's not a dance.
N o w we come to the middle of the chart. N o , not the middle, to thefirstquarter. Like
1959 it becomes suddenly very active. M a y b e because John Cage opened up a school
and has all those people coming to his school. Also, the so-called nouveaux realistes in
France become very active, plus Ben Vautier becomes very active. So 1959 is a very
influential year. W e have N a m June Paik playing [his]firstpiece, Vostell doing [his]
first piece, Allan Kaprow doing [his]firstHappenings, Dick Higgins and Yves Klein.
Well, he was already before that, but he culminated, let's say, by then. Ben Vautier
doing hisfirstpiece by signing ... everything: continents, peace, famine, war, noise,
end of the world and especially h u m a n sculptures. That's something important to
know because later Manzoni copied it. Gestures ... he hadfirstgestures appearing
then in 1959 and not in 1968 with Acconci and people like that. A n d w e have first
postage stamps of B o b Watts, a lot of card music that is written on cards like of
George Brecht andfirst-conceptart of Henry Flynt. Then that goes on to 1960. A n d
Fluxus comes in '61. Actually, you could say officially early in '62. Because in '611 had
a gallery which did everything that later Fluxus did but did not use that name.
L M : That's the A G Gallery?
G M : Right. A n d La Monte Young had a series of the same kind of things, same kind of
Events, at Y o k o Ono's studio on Chambers Street, so that chart points out, gives the
whole programme, you know, what was performed.
L M : Yoko's loft ... what's the date there? W a s that before the Wiesbaden?
G M : Oh, definitely. That's in 1960, 1961.
L M : Oh, so it's the year before.
G M : It's '61, just like the A G Gallery was '61.
L M : That was the fall of '61, was it, the A G Gallery?
G M : Winter of'61.
L M : What were you doing up until the time you started the A G Gallery? That's the first
time you appealed] there.
186 L A R R Y M I L L E R
G M : The reason I got in touch with all those people was that I went to Richard Maxfield's
class. See, after John Cage ... John Cage gave [a] one-year class in N e w School. The
second year Richard Maxfield gave a class in electronic music and I met La Monte
Young there who was taking the same class, you know. So 1 was interested in what La
Monte was doing. H e introduced [me to] other people, and that's how we put together
this whole programme at the A G Gallery and meanwhile he had put up the
programme at Yoko's gallery ... loft. So we have A G and Yoko's loft more or less
simultaneously. They were slightly different but not much, like we both featured
Jackson M a c Low, we both featured Bob Morris and La Monte Young. But we
wouldn't show the same compositions, you know, that we would ... At the A G we had
two La Monte Young's compositions, Nos 3 and 7, and at Yoko's loft it was all [the]
1961 compositions - you know: 'Draw a straight line.' A n d Henry Flynt gave a concert
at Yoko's loft but a lecture in [the] A G Gallery. So they were a little different there.
L M : These were going on concurrently, these ...
G M : Right.
L M : This was when youfirstmet Yoko?
G M : Yeah, and everybody else. Well, Dick Higgins - Richard Maxfield, of course, I'd met
before, in the school.
L M : Yeah. Can I back up there just a minute? Were you in any of the John Cage classes at
the N e w School?
GM: No,
L M : But the Richard Maxfield classes you were. And that's where youfirstreally made all
the connections.
G M : Right. See, m yfirstinterest was electronic music.
L M : Were you composing then?
G M : Yeah, I was doing some composing.
L M : D o those exist now?
G M : No, they don't.
L M : W h y not?
G M : I don't know what happened to them.
L M : Oh!
G M : Then in 1962, 1 went to Europe and the plan was to continue ... Oh, before I went to
Europe we published or at least we put together La Monte Young's Anthology, that
book, you know, the red book.
L M : I have that here.
G M : Right. So. W e couldn't include everything that we had collected, all the materials we had
collected by then - like it didn't have Bob Watts and you know had very few things by
George Brecht - and so I thought I would go ahead and make another publication with
all the pieces that were not included in [the] Anthology. More or less newer pieces. But La
Monte wasn't interested in doing a second Anthology book. So the initial plan was just to
do another, like a second Anthology book, except graphically it would have been a little
more, er, less conventional than thefirstone, which means it would have had objects and
you know, a different kind of packaging. So really then the idea germinated to use the
whole book as bound envelopes with objects in the envelopes. See, we had a couple
INTERVIEW WITH GEORGE MACIUNAS 187
objects already in thefirstAnthology, you know, like the loose Diter Rot machine holes,
things like that. A little envelope with [a] card of La Monte, another envelope with a letter
in it, you know - so things like that. Cards that have to be cut up ...
LM: N o w , you designed that book.
GM: Yeah, 1 designed that book.
LM: And it was edited by ... put together ...
GM: La Monte Young and Jackson M a c Low.
LM: So then did they suggest the ... was this yourfirstpublication, thefirstFluxus
publication, the second one you're talking about?
GM: The second one was going to be thefirstFluxus publication but it took a few years to
get off the ground Meanwhile w e thought, well, we'll do concerts, that's easier than
publishing and will give us propaganda like for the publication. M a y b e then we'll find
people w h o will want to buy publications - because atfirstw e couldn't sell Anthology
either, you know, so it was just accumulating in a warehouse. So then the idea was to
do concerts as a promotional trick for selling whatever we were going to publish or
produce. That's h o w the Wiesbaden series came by and that's thefirsttime that it was
called 'Fluxus Festivals' and that's the Fall of ...
LM: September of '62, isn't it?
GM: Right. Yeah, September of '62. A n d ...
LM: W a s it being called Fluxux by then?
GM: Yeah. It was called a Fluxus Festival.
LM: Here's m y chance then to ...
GM: There were fourteen concerts in a row.
LM: I'd like to ask about the name Fluxus, I mean, where did that come from?
GM: That came still while w e were thinking in N e w York of what to call the new
publication.
LM: W h e n you say 'we', you mean you and L a Monte.
GM: No, La Monte sort of didn't care, and then [it] was mainly m e and m y gallery partner,
'cause he was going to maybe call the gallery that or something. Then the gallery went
bankrupt so it didn't matter; he dropped out, so he's out of the picture.
LM: He's not an artist.
GM: No. So basically it was m e alone then w h o finally determined we were going to call that
name, and [the] reason for it was the various meanings that you'dfindin the dictionary
for it - you know, so that it's like it has very broad, m a n y meanings, sort of funny
meanings. Nobody seemed to care anyway what we were going to call it because there
was no formal meetings or groups or anything.
LM: The name was thought of atfirstto refer to ...
GM: Just to the publication.
LM: A publication called ...
GM: Fluxus, and that's it, that was going to be like a book, with a title, that's all.
LM: Did you think of then Fluxus ... Y o u didn't think of it in the beginning the way it's
sort of come to be known now, Fluxus sort of ... ?
GM: As a movement?
LM: Stand ... no?
188 L A R R Y M I L L E R
G M : No. It was just the name of a book, the second anthology ... N o w , then, after we
started to do the concerts we started to have little shows - exhibits, too - and that's
how we started to make objects, to be sort of multiples, you know, mass-produced.
That was still before the yearbook came out, thefirstFlux yearbook. It was couple
years before the yearbook came out; now, do you have the second part of the chart?
L M : The second part is folded over there.
G M : Nope, it's missing.
L M : This goes up to 1962 only 1 mean, rather ...
G M : Yeah, that's what I mean. It goes to 1964.
L M : Y o u know, you never gave m e the second part.
G M : All right, I'll have to do it from m y memory. N o w like around '64 or so we finally did a
... the second Yearbox ... yearbook ... came out - that's the bound envelopes - and
[it] didn't sell at all. Maybe we sold two or one copy. They were selling then, I think,
$20 or $30 each. N o w they're selling for $250. Heh, heh.
L M : This is the Yearbox.
G M : Yeah.
L M : That's the one with the little ...
G M : With envelopes.
L M : I guess I don't have that. The one I have hasfilmsand ...
G M : That's the second Yearbox. Thefirstone is bound envelopes.
L M : Oh, Barbara has one of those at Backworks.
G M : Yeah,
L M : Is that with the metal bolts through the ...
G M : Right. And then the contents is like an accordion; it just keeps falling out and being in
your way all the time.
L M : Yeah. Are there, is that edition over, are the contents all dispersed?
G M : N o , it's still . . .Now and then I still put a couple up.
L M : Yeah?
G M : [It] takes lot of time to put it together.
L M : What can I trade you for one of those?
GM: Well . . .
L M : Carry you to Jamaica on m y back? [He laughs.]
G M : Yeah, [laughs.] Anyway, then, why you're lucky to have the second Yearbox because
that's completely out of print, because there are no more viewers available - the film
viewers.
L M : I know you said they're nowhere in the world but I'm going to try to check into that
for you.
G M : Well, if you find then I can put more out because I have everything else, all the other
components except ...
L M : Yeah.
G M : Eight-millimetre, not Super 8, 8 m m viewers, little hand-held viewers.
L M : So have you ...
G M : See the objects came out sort of together with those Yearboxes and we were not
rushing. First objects were quite a few of Bob Watts and George Brecht, especially
INTERVIEW W I T H G E O R G E M A C I U N A S 189
George Brecht, came out with puzzles and games, things like that. They were, oh, I
would say - let's see if it's already on this chart - 1963, hisfirst'Water Y a m ' events
came out, which is now out of print.
LM: So let m e see if I ...
G M : Objects came from 1963 on.
LM: Okay, thefirstobject then was the ...
G M : The Water Yam.
LM: N o w we're talking about boxes. First publication was the Yearbox, which followed ...
G M : No, you could say the Water Yam because that's all printed.
LM: Because it came out before even though it was started later.
G M : It came out before the Yearbox.
LM: Because it took longer to produce. The 'Water Y a m ' then, was that produced by you
and George Brecht?
G M : Well, by me, he just gave m e the text.
LM: And then you had the cards printed?
G M : Yeah, and the boxes made and everything.
LM: Had he issued any boxes? I'm trying to get down sort of to the genesis of the idea of
Fluxboxes.
G M : Well, he made up prototypes of boxes that were puzzles. See, 1 got hold of lots of
plastic boxes from a factory and then just handed them to everybody and I said, how
about doing something with them? So George Brecht was thefirstone to respond and
he came up with lots of little boxes, with games and puzzles and things like that.
LM: What had been his format before then? Cards? Printed Events?
G M : Boxes, too. They were sort of handmade wooden boxes.
LM: O n the order of Cornell, would you say ... influenced by Cornell?
G M : Yeah, Cornell-style and sort of one of a kind definitely. But now I was saying we were
going to make multiples, you know, say, like [one] hundred boxes. So here is a simple
plastic box and I asked him to think up simple things to do with it. So George Brecht
thought of, he was thefirstone to respond Ben Vautier responded with a lot, too. And
Bob Watts. And, you know, by then, each year there are more and more; by now there
are a hundred boxes by almost everyone.
LM: So the veryfirstbox was Water Yam.
G M : Water Yam, yeah.
LM: That was with Bob and George.
G M : That's just George Brecht.
LM: George Brecht. Well, what a m I thinking of? I'm thinking of Y a m Festival.
G M : Water Yam is complete now, that's [the] complete works of George Brecht really, on
cards, printed.
LM: What were some of the other early boxes then?
G M : Ball and quiz puzzles, like the ball puzzle: 'Observe the ball rolling uphill'; you know
that one?
LM: Uhhuh.
G M : That's one of his early ones. Or a box that contained a shell, sea shell, and the text says:
'Arrange the beads in such a way that the word "C-U-A-L" never occurs.'
190 L A R R Y M I L L E R
just ask you both questions and then you can take it - the history, how you trace
concretism and how that's evolved today. And secondly, what part does humour play
in that and how do you trace the history of humour? Because it seems to m e that your
aesthetic is tied up with both of these things.
GM: Yeah, that's right. Well, concretism is a very simple term. It means the opposite of
abstraction. So that's what the dictionary meaning means: opposite of abstraction.
LM: Well, this doesn't mean that a realistic painting is concrete?
GM: No, but the realistic painting is not realistic, it's illusionistic. Right?
LM: U h huh.
GM: So it's not concrete, therefore. Concrete painting would be ... oh ... something like
Ay-O's holes. You know, the holes are concrete, they're not illusion. If you painted the
holes to look like holes, they would not be concrete any more, they would be
illusionistic. Many people call realistic paintings by the wrong terminology. Like
Rembrandt or D a Vinci. They're not realistic at all, they're illusionistic. N o w the first
concrete painting would be ... oh ... like Chinese abstract calligraphy. That's
concrete. There's no illusion about it.
LM: Because of gesture being ...
GM: Yeah, because he writes a character. N o w [its] same thing in music. Y o u can have
illusionistic music, you can have abstract music, you can have concrete music. Or you
can have poetry the same way. N o w in music, let's say, if you have an orchestra play,
that's abstract because the sounds are all done artificially by musical instruments. But
if that orchestra is trying to imitate a storm, say, like Debussy or Ravel does it, that's
illusionistic now. It's still not realistic. But if you're going to use noises like the
clapping of the audience or farting or whatever, now that's concrete. Or street-car
sounds, you know. Or a whole bunch of dishes falling down from the shelf: that's
concrete. Nothing illusionistic about it. Or abstract. So the same thing with action.
You have a ballet, which is very abstract. You make completely concrete abstract
gestures ... nothing to do with everyday life. So it's very stylised, very abstract. You
can be illusionistic, too; in a ballet where you try to imitate something, like a swan, the
movement of [a] swan; that's still not realistic. Realistic would be, let's say, if you
marched in a circle, just walked in a circle, like they had a ballet like that. These two
artists, they did Stravinsky's ballet in one version like that where the soldiers just
marched throughout the whole piece in a circle. That I would call a concrete ballet.
LM: What were the best examples in the visual and plastic arts?
G M : For concrete?
LM: Yeah, what were the things that most influenced you, because I know, 1 want to try to
get you [to be] a little more specific.
G M : Well, the ready-made is the most concrete thing. Cannot be more concrete than the
ready-made.
LM: Because it is what it is.
G M : Right, so that's extreme concrete. There's no illusion about it, it's not abstract. Most
concrete is the ready-made. N o w , Duchamp thought mainly about ready-made
objects. John Cage extended it to ready-made sound George Brecht extended it
furthermore ... well, together with Ben Vautier ... into ready-made actions, everyday
192 L A R R Y M I L L E R
actions, so for instance a piece of George Brecht where he turned a light on, and ofT,
okay? That's the piece. Turn the light on and then off. N o w you do that every day,
right?
L M : U h huh.
G M : ... without even knowing you're performing George Brecht. That's a real concrete
piece; you see, not when you do it like a stage piece especially, like every day. He says
another one: two directions - yellow and red. All right, it could be street-lights
changing from red to yellow. Anyway, 1 would give to George Brecht a lot of credit for
extending that idea of ready-made into the realm of action.
LM: And Ben Vautier?
GM: A n d Ben Vautier, too.
LM: What sort of things did he do that were along these lines?
GM: Well, you see he would make a ready-made out of everything, like he says he would
sign a war as his piece - that's a ready-made. The whole Second World W a r is a Ben
Vautier piece.
LM: [Laughs] I cannot focus when I'm laughing.
GM: Okay.
LM: So the idea of signing ... didn't he sign the world?
GM: World God, everything, end of the world. N o w he is taking the ready-made to
absurdity, to the absurd end H e leaves nothing untouched; he signs everything.
Therefore, everything is Ben Vautier. So there is a humour coming in already. But
otherwise humour, there's a lot of humour in Futurist's Theatre, there's also humour
in just straight vaudeville, like Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton. There's a lot of
humour in musical humour, like Spike Jones. N o w they may not have a very direct
influence, but they were still there, so there's still that tradition of doing funny concerts
and funny music. And Bob Watts was sort of keen on humour. A n d Ben Vautier again,
but I would say I was mostly concerned with humour, I mean like that's m y main
interest, is humour. And Bob Watts had a lot of it, that concern. George Brecht, 1 don't
know ... maybe quite a lot, too. But generally most Fluxus people tended to have a
concern with humour.
LM: D o you think that that's something that had been lacking in the scene in general?
GM: Right, yeah. Even in Futurist times humour was sort of very incidental. I mean, they
were very darn serious with their serious manifestos. W e came out with funny
manifestos. I mean, they would never write funny manifestos. The results may have
looked funny but like they didn't really intend it to be so funny. Like they, you know,
they were more interested in shock value than the humour value. So lots of boxes we
made are so very humorous, films, everything, concerts, sports events, foods ...
whatever we did, like even serious things like a Mass ended up to be humorous,
LM: Yeah, I know, I was a gorilla. That was one of m yfirstcontacts with you, yeah, at
Douglass.
GM: Yeah, you were a gorilla.
LM: I remember thefirsttime I met you was when we were going to do a concert or events
at Stonybrook, but it never came off.
GM: It never materialised and we collected lots of material and lots of pieces . . .
INTERVIEW W I T H G E O R G E M A C I U N A S 193
showing let's say lots of flowers, all right? A n d the letterhead m a y be wheat or
something. So the one has no connection with the other, and the fact that why flowers
have to be on an envelope, they could be on a carpet, too, you know.
LM: U h huh.
GM: N o w that's the difference. That's not concretism. That's functionalism.
LM: D o these same principles, though, apply to performance, Fluxus performance?
GM: Yeah, right. Well, not as much. Y o u see, the reason I a m so concerned with that is that
that's an architect's training, I mean, that's the way [an] architect thinks - he thinks in
functionalism - otherwise he's not an architect, he's a sculptor or stage designer. If he's
an architect or engineer, he'll think in a functional way. Or a mathematician thinks in a
functional way, also. Function is a mathematical term. N o w in performance, to a
certain degree, of course, if you're going to have a harpsichord and you want to do a
piece, then obviously you should use the harpsichord for that piece. Y o u don't have to
play on the keyboard, you know, and play Couperin or something, but you should use
some characteristic of the harpsichord: its shape, its lightness or the way the strings
respond to objects being thrown into it or whatever. That would be functional way of
using it. And a non-functional way, 1 would say, would be if you, say, stood next to th
harpsichord and played a violin, you know. N o w , we have done a piece like that, too,
where a performer played the harmonica inside the harpsichord, but that was as a joke;
in other words, you thought, he opens up the harpsichord ...
LM: That was m e that did that.
GM: Yeah. That's a good piece. Y o u thought, you know, the audience thought, well, you're
going to perform something on the strings or something inside and then you hear
harmonica sound coming as a surprise, so it's sort of like a surprise piece. But
definitely, see, it's more obvious to be functional, easier, let's say, to be functional in
performance.
LM: Easier.
GM: Yeah, definitely, because, you know, you're given not as many limitations, you're
given, in fact, help. You're getting all those instruments and you may let yourself use
them. So you end up using them. You're being functional then. It's a little harder when
you are trying to design objects because the tendency is to become just decorative and
just apply decoration on top of things that have nothing to do with what you are
doing. Y o u know, it's like, look at the stores that sell stationeries; 1 mean, most of th
stationeries have no function at all, no relationship to the idea of the envelope, which
means enclosing something else. N o w Jaime Davidovich did a functional piece. He
wrinkled up a piece of paper and then painted the wrinkles of paper so that it came out
like constantly wrinkled paper.
LM: Printed as wrinkles?
GM: Yeah. I would say that's more or less of a functional. H e used the function of a paper,
he did something that the paper, that is characteristic of the paper, you know, and
didn't print, you know, something that had no connection with the paper.
LM: Well, okay, while we're on this terminology then, how does functionalism - which is
sort of a favourite concern of yours because of your architecture background, how
does that differ from automorphism that you have under Bob Morris?
INTERVIEW W I T H G E O R G E M A C I U N A S 195
GM: Oh, it's entirely different thing now. Automorphism means a thing making itself.
LM: Uhhuh.
GM: Okay. So, now, and he was about the only one that I know that practised that form of
art. And I coined that term, he, nobody, I think, has used that term, automorphism.
LM: Uhhuh.
GM: By that is meant, for instance ... I'll give you, some classic examples of this ... he built
a box which contained its own making - sound of its own making, a tape, the making
of that box. And that's all it was, it was just a box with tape inside of its own making.
He made afilingsystem, the whole like a library-cardfilingsystem.
LM: I know that piece ... afilethat refers to itself.
GM: ... where every card described its own making: where he got the paper, where
automorphism, you know, but, like, that has nothing to do with functionalism.
LM; Or concretism?
GM: Well, it's very concrete.
LM: I suppose I'd had a looser definition ...
GM: It's a branch of concretism.
LM: That's what I thought.
GM: You see, it's a branch of concretism.
LM: I thought functionalism would be similar, too, because functionalism means that the
concern of the piece, let's call it, is with the characteristics of the medium itself.
GM: Yeah, in a sense it is functional, but it doesn't have to be. It could still be automorphic.
LM: Uhhuh.
GM: It's not a requirement. It's nice if it is. Uh, but it's not a prerequisite, you know,
anyway, it's an entirely] different thing; it's like saying apple and sweet. All right,
apple can be sweet but it can also be sour. Heh, heh, you know.
LM: Uhhuh.
GM: And maybe it's nicer when it's sweet or the other way around, but the two are still
separate things.
LM: I want to just get a few catch-all kind of questions here. I wanted to know if you made
a connection between Fluxus and Dada, in that Fluxus is a name that's applied to, let's
say - for lack of a better word - a certain sort of aesthetic or approach to expression,
and then there were words, this idea of a word being kind of invented to represent a
sensibility - Dada has that.
G M : Yeah, well ... there's nothing wrong there.
LM: And then there's Merz ...
GM: It became that, eventually, after a few years... it became I would say not a group, but
more like a way of life, you know. N o w Dada was definitely a tight group with a strict
membership. Fluxus is not. It's more like a way of doing things, you know. Very
informal, sort of like a joke group. It's like if you ask people like George Brecht, 'Are
you Fluxus?', then he'll just laugh at you. It's more like Zen than Dada in that sense. If
you ask a Zen monk, 'Are you Zen?' he probably won't reply by saying 'Yes, I'm Zen.'
He'll give you some odd answer ... like hit you on the head with a stick. So, it's not
that rational of a group. It's not easy to describe it in just a sentence ... its
characteristics. But I think, like, you carry many things over. It has the humour; it does
196 LARRY MILLER
have the functionalism, a lot of that; it is very concrete, I think; it has influences of,
like, John Cage, tremendous influence, and Duchamp, and to a slight degree maybe
Yves Klein by way of Ben Vautier. A n d in music, the same thing, concretism again,
like humour m a y branch out into absurdity and things like that, or absurd theatre.
N o w by monomorphism - you mentioned monomorphism - that's an important item
which should be mentioned. That's where it differs from Happenings. See, happenings
are polymorphic, which means many things happening at the same time. That's fine,
that's like baroque theatre. Y o u know, there would be everything going on: horses
jumping and fireworks and waterplay and somebody reciting poems and Louis XIV
eating a dinner at the same time. So, that's polymorphism. Poly means many forms.
Monomorphism, that means more one form. N o w , reason for that is that, you see, lot
of Fluxus is gaglike. That's part of the humour, it's like a gag. In fact, I wouldn't put it
in any higher class than a gag, maybe a good gag.
L M : Really?
G M : Yes.
L M : Y o u don't consider Fluxus art?
G M : A high art form? N o . I think it's good, inventive gags. That's what we're doing. And
there's no reason why a gag, some people, if they want to call it art,fine,you know.
Like I think gags of Buster Keaton are really [a] high art form, you know, heh, heh,
sight gags. W e do not just sight gags: sound gags, object gags, all kinds of gags. N o w ,
you cannot have a joke in multi-forms. In other words, you cannot have six jokers
standing and telling you six jokes simultaneously. It just wouldn't work. Has to be one
joke at a time.
L M : Because jokes apply to our linear expectations.
G M : Right. The whole structure's linear and you cannot have even two jokes
simultaneously; you don't get it. So the whole structure of a joke is linear and
monomorphic and I think that's why our concept pieces tend to be that way; it's like a
gag. Y o u cannot have three gags simultaneously either, you're just going to miss two of
them. You'H get one and miss two. Watch Buster Keaton. He'll never have two gags at
the same time. They follow one another very quickly, but they will not be
simultaneous. A n d if they're simultaneous, usually they're bad gags. That's one
reason I think Marx Brothers are not that good on gags because they overcrowd them.
They just, you know, put many gags together and then you just miss it unless you see
theirfilmfive,six times and you can sort the gags all out.
L M : Question, then. If you, okay, you consider Fluxus not really a group but a sensibility,
kind of, and you don't consider it high art, you consider it gag.
G M : L o w art. Yeah.
L M : Yeah. What do you consider the state of the arts at this point and what do you
consider high art?
GM: Well, there's a lot, too much high art, in fact; that's why we're doing Fluxus.
LM: Compare Fluxus and ...
GM: A n d high art?
LM: A n d high art today.
G M : First of all, high art is very marketable. Y o u can sell for half a million, you can sell for
INTERVIEW W I T H G E O R G E M A C I U N A S 197
100,000. You know, very marketable. Second, the names are big names, they're
marketable names. Like, you just have to mention the name and everybody knows.
Like you mention Warhol, Lichtenstein, everybody knows. Mention Ben Vautier, even
George Brecht, very few people will know. And now even when they say a Yearbox
sells for 250, there are very few collectors who will collect them, they're just special
collectors of Fluxus things and they're willing to pay those prices because they're just
not available any more. But museums don't buy it. N o w high art is something you find
in museums. Fluxus you don'tfindin museums. Museums just don't have it. The only
exception is Beaubourg and that's only because of Pontus Hulten, and even then, he
has all Fluxus things in the library, not in [the] collection of art, but in the library, he
has documents. So he doesn't consider it art either; he considers it a document.
LM: But that doesn't bother you?
GM: No, in fact it pleases me.
LM: W h y does it please you?
GM: Because we're never intended to be high art. W e came out to be like a bunch of jokers.
In fact, I gave couple times an answer to one banker asked m e when we applied for a
mortgage. They asked Bob Watts what was his profession, he said, well he was a
professor for twenty-five years. Then they asked what do I make and what do I do, and
I said, T make jokes!' 'Oh,', they said, 'you're not going to make a joke out of the
mortgage now will you?' [Laughs.]
LM: Little did they know. [Laughs.]
GM: [Laughs.] N o w , like our early manifestos, when they were still serious, like thefirstor
second year, they were all anti-art sort of, and all tended to be towards sort of forms
that everybody could do. Y o u see, it's all connected with John Cage. W h e n John Cage
says that you can listen to street noise and get art experience from that, then you don't
need musicians to make music. Everybody can be his own musician and listen to street
noises. If you get art experience from George Brecht's piece of turning the light on and
off every evening or morning, everybody is that, you see? You're leaving the whole
professional artist [thing] completely. If you can get from everyday life experience,
from everyday ready-mades, you can substitute art experience with that, then you
completely eliminate the need of artists. All I would add is that I would say, well, even
better would be to obtain an art experience from a chair by Charles Eames let's say.
Then you have a good chair you can sit on, plus you have an art experience when you
sit on it. You kill two birds with one stone and still have no artist needed, but you need
then somebody like Charles Eames [Laughs.]
LM: So that's getting back to sort of like functionalism again.
GM: That you see was m y ... I was pushing him.
LM: U h huh. Okay.
GM: Bob Watts was probably the one who disagreed most with functionalism and you'll
notice that there are many of his pieces that are completely non-functional.
LM: Well, some of them are.
GM: For instance, postcards.
LM: They make a joke of function sometimes.
GM: No, there's just no connection. He'll make a postcard that has nothing to do with a
198 L A R R Y M I L L E R
postcard. N o w , Ben Vautier will do a very functional postcard where he has one called
'Postman's Choice.' O n one side of the postcard, he'll write one address with a stamp
and on another, another address with a stamp. That's functionalism.
G M : He's using the medium for a piece. N o w the postcard is used, he understands the
medium and he uses the medium for his piece. It's closely connected to the way [the]
piece is composed. But if you stamp your o w n face on the postcard, so what?
•
SUSAN L JAROSI:
SELECTIONS FROM AN INTERVIEW WITH BILLIE
MACIUNAS
Almost twenty years after George Maciunas' death in M a y 1978, Billie Maciunas speaks here
for thefirsttime about her nine-month relationship with George Maciunas and their three-
month marriage. The two met in the summer of 1977 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts,
where George had retreated from N e w York City. The couple was married twice in February
1978:firstby civil ceremony in Massachusetts and then by Geoff Hendricks in N e w York
City as part of the Fluxus N e w Year's Cabaret (25 February 1978). The following interview
took place at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, in two sessions - 9 October and 27
November 1996.
SJ: D o you think something connected you to George on some other level? Hypothetically
a lot of the people w h o came together to form the group known as Fluxus were misfits
or outcasts. D o you think maybe there was an element of that? W h y do you think
George attracted people like that?
B M : Because he was a refugee himself. H e had to m a k e himself at h o m e in a totally new
place. A n d that must have been difficult. Lithuanians are a small, very clannish and
ethnically identifiable group in terms of culture and language. I think the Fluxus group
in a certain sense was a family for him. I remember reading something that he toid
Hollis [Melton], Jonas' [Mekas] wife at the time, that home-making was the highest art.
A n d what did he do? H e went to Soho and m a d e all these homes for these artists. He
gave m e a home. Really he gave a lot of these people a core place to identify with. I
think he was a home-maker in the highest art sense of the word too. I think he wanted
to care for people. M a y b e that's why so many people identified him as a dictator,
because they resisted and didn't like it; he wanted to organise and had a certain way of
looking at things and doing things, and I think he was fairly patriarchal, being strong-
minded and having a code and a set of values that he would like to carry through. But I
don't think he was a dictator in any sense of the word.
SJ: D o you think you might have been attracted to that aspect of him, in that he was a
home-maker, he knew h o w to provide and bring people together and make them feel
comfortable or safe?
B M : W h a t attracted m e to him, I remember at one time being in the kitchen and seeing him
and actually feeling, suddenly seeing myself as a person w h o was very afraid of
strangers, and particularly men. I think George was so cultured he didn't try to impose
himself on me. H e didn't have any of those normal games of trying to dominate or
impress. George just sort of hung back and would do small things. H e invited m e to a
harpsichord concert; we went to a movie. I just found he was more interesting, more
interesting to talk with, more lively, more ... you can imagine. H e was the first
intelligent person that I'd ever met, that's h o w I've often described it. I didn't really
know what an intelligent person was until I met George. I think George was protective,
really. H e just saw m e as a person w h o needed protection, and he did it.
H e did that for me, and I don't know what I would have done if he hadn't. In some
sense it was idyllic. H e was amused by me; he was amused by m y naivete and
ignorance. I remember one time I was walking across the yard, and I wasn't aware he
was on the porch, but he was there, until he called m y name. A n d I looked up. It was
very bright outside and the porch was dark, so I had to actually go up to the screen and
look in to see that he was there. H e invited m e in, so I went in and sat down. H e loved
Monteverdi operas, and that was playing on the stereo. It was beautiful. But I was in
another world really. I was sitting with m y back to him, and he said, This is being sung
by nuns'. I just kind of turned around -1 couldn't m a k e anything of the comment. So I
shrugged and turned back around A n d he laughed! I was struck by the fact that he
laughed at what I n o w see as insouciance, but also total non-culture, that I couldn't
appreciate ...
SJ: But why should that be anything that you should have appreciated, that it was sung by
nuns?
A N I N T E R V I E W W I T H BILLIE M A C I U N A S 201
BM: Well, that's the thing that I couldn'tfigureout at the time. [Laughs.]
SJ: I cannot figure it out now.
B M : [Laughs.] I don't know. It meant something to him. But maybe a normal person would
have said, 'Yes, and ...' Or, 'Were you ever in a choir?' or 'Did you grow up with this
music?' So, I wasn't used to someone finding that delightful, amusing or funny and
showing it.
SJ: Did you feel strange about participating in George's fantasies at first?
BM: I did feel, as he got sicker, that it was fairly overwhelming and it was happening very
quickly. H e was very sick. I had learned some sort of relaxation body techniques that I
was trying. Doing that, because it required him lying still and just free-associating, he
began to tell m e more things.
SJ: So this accelerated as he got sicker?
B M : Right. I wrote to a psychiatrist, I think, that I knew from w h o m I'd learned this
relaxation technique. I wrote and told him that I was a little bit frightened that this was
happening. H e said, 'Run. It's evil, blah, blah ...' O f course I was not going to run. I
had, one, a lot of compassion for George and interest in his situation, and I felt that I
was really the only person around that was helping him. N o w , I see that someone else
would have, but I didn't k n o w that at the time. H e said I was helping him and there
was no one else around and that was enough. And, two, I didn't k n o w really where to
run to. So I stayed there, and as it turned out Hala Pietkowicz came into the kitchen
one day. She was another sort of a caretaker. Anyway, she was a friend of George's,
and she was one of the few friends of mine after George died. She came and said,
'George wants to get married so that his social security won't be wasted after he dies.' I
said, 'Well, I'll marry George if he comes to m e and tells m e that he loves m e and he
wants to get married'. She said, 'Well, n o w don't m a k e it too difficult for him'.
[Laughs.] So I said, 'Well, okay, at least some kind of indication that it's more than
social security.'
SJ: Did you have those kind of feelings for him?
B M : U m . I did. I ... let's put it this way ... I felt life was easier with George. George was
one of the kindest people that I had known. I had had a very hard life. H e didn't treat
me as stupidly as m a n y others have. H e seemed to care about me. H e needed me. I
thought he was a gentleman. I thought he was a gentleman and cultured and a lovely
person. A n d I would agree to marry him because ... just because of that. It was a sort
of humane kind of decision. That's the level I wanted it at. I didn't care about social
security. That m a y be part of m y romanticism. But, at any rate, he did come and say
that he would be very pleased if I would marry him - he didn't talk about social
security or anything like that. So, we did it.
SJ: D o you think it was something he felt he had to do before he died?
B M : I do. H e got very sick. Actually, I went to Maryland to visit m y family at one point.
He had told someone there as he got sicker (and he was in terrible pain) that he
wanted to wait until I came back to go to the hospital. But he did not wait. H e went.
There he was diagnosed as having terminal cancer. I only found out about all this
when I came back. But we had already agreed to marry. I remember as I was saying
good-bye, I kissed him very little like, gentle little kiss on the lips, and he said, 'My
202 S U S A N L JAROSI
first kiss'. Y o u know, he was a virgin and he died a virgin. H e had not had a sexual
relationship with anyone.
SJ: Did George tell you, This is h o w I want to get married. This is what it's going to be
like'. Did you have any indication?
B M : N o . Well, we decided to do it simply, you know, and w e had just the civil ceremony in
Great Barrington. So we did it legally too. I don't k n o w whose idea it was to do it
legally, but of course that would have been important for social security. After George
died, things changed very, very rapidly. People that had not seemed mean before were
suddenly mean. His family, especially his sister, and B o b Watts were calling and telling
m e that George owed them vast amounts of money, that he'd been a b u m all his life,
that they had given him all this money. I was saying, T don't k n o w anything about
that; put it in writing; don't bother m e ; I'm grieving'.
Barbara M o o r e was upset that I might be throwing things away in the house that
would be valuable. Everyone seemed to be sort of invading. A n d I was fairly ignorant,
that m u c h is true. I didn't k n o w the history of Fluxus. I didn't k n o w the value of things
in the house. George hadn't clued m e in on it. His papers came back from the hospital
after he died covered with figures, chaotic figures of him trying to figure out what his
debts were to Bob Watts. It was really pathetic. But he had told m e that he didn't feel
that he owed Bob anything. I think he ended up making money for everyone around
him. Including me. But he did not leave a will. I only benefited because by law in
Massachusetts the wife inherits two-thirds of the estate. But at the time his works were
being sold for a couple of dollars a piece in Barbara Moore's gallery.
W h a t ended up happening is that I got caught up in this sort of scavenger hunt for
George's things. I had a vague notion they were culturally valuable, but they didn't
appear to be financially valuable and it didn't matter. Nevertheless, I was angry at the
way I was being treated. Barbara was saying, 'Well, you don't k n o w anything about
Fluxus'. People were saying these things to other people, actually not directly to me.
Nijole, George's sister, was telling everyone that George had said he was disappointed
in m e before he died. That came back to me. Jean Brown told m e that on the phone.
They were selling the house that I was, you know, as I was living there. I was upstairs
in the attic, and I heard footsteps and went d o w n to investigate. They said, 'Well, we're
moving in. The house has been sold'. So, with Hollis' help I packed everything up and
escaped in the middle of the night, and it was just like being an outlaw.
SJ: W h o had sold the house?
B M : I guess Bob and Nijole considered it theirs and they arranged to sell it. I did stay as a
so-called caretaker for a while, but I couldn't take care of it. I had no idea what to do
and I was totally overwhelmed. I had no money to take care of the place. The pipes
froze in the house and broke. It was like a glacier in there. A part of m e did not care -1
didn't feel I was being treated well and that life was impossible. Basically iife became
better with George and after he died it reverted back to what it had been. While it was
possible with George to be spiritual in the highest sense of the word - to do things for
love - other people would not be able to see that. George's sister, for example, thought
that I was an adventuress w h o had taken advantage of him. This was really
disillusioning and heartbreaking for m e , because I wanted them to be m y family. I was
A N I N T E R V I E W W I T H BILLIE M A C I U N A S 203
really crushed. However, I did have some experience with being on m y own, so I just
fought back. I did get out of there and went up to upstate N e w York. I hired an
attorney. It was a mess. N o one knew what anything was; no one knew where anything
was. I had not looked in all the boxes. W h e n I did I found original posters by John
Lennon. All sorts of things that I did recognise; many things I didn't. But I kept it
together. I received some welfare checks in upstate N e w York, but I also got things out
of those boxes like the posters and went to N e w York and sold them. I sold them very
cheaply, to live. I sold a bunch of posters for like $2000 to Jean Brown's son's gallery
there. Of course, shortly after that John Lennon was killed, so they were worth a lot.
But I never asked for what they were worth.
So, somewhere in there I decided [to write] the manuscript. Then I took it to George
Quasha in Rhinebeck, N e w York, w h o said he would give m e 500 copies in exchange
for George's I B M composer. I said, 'Deal.' So that composer was the composer that
George typed all of his posters and graphic design work on. A n d I went to Portugal. I
chose Portugal, because in George's collection of music there was a tape called
Portuguese Harpsichord. I just thought, 'Portugal - well, don't know what's going on
there; it's not industrial; it sounds quaint; I know it will be poetic'
SJ: H o w soon after George died did you go to Rhinebeck?
BM: Maybe about a year. I stayed in Portugal about two years. In that amount of time, the
lawyer discovered George still had a loft in N e w York on Green Street. He'd never told
me. I don't even know if he remembered. So they sold the loft. I came back. Suddenly I
had some money. I used the money to educate myself. I started m y undergraduate
education at age thirty-four, and I went to Brown. That was also a stroke of luck: it's
the only school I applied to; I didn't know it was an avant-garde school; I chose it
because they taught Portuguese and because it was in a nice Portuguese-speaking area.
I used George's money tofinancem y life while I did that.
SJ: W a s George's sister close with him?
BM: There were huge gaps in her knowledge of George. I was stunned when I was learning
that she felt George owed them vast sums of money and essentially that he was a ne'er-
do-well. It's as if she didn't really ... H e must have protected her or kept her out of it in
some way as he had with m e in the beginning. Unless you knew what to ask him, you
would not find out.
SJ: So with certain parts of his life he was very private?
BM: Yeah, it seemed to be confined to the group. H e didn't extend it into his family life. I
gather that his mother was disappointed that he wasn't an art teacher. Y o u know they
could only imagine a very straight life and that he wasn't. That's the picture I get. And so
I think they could only imagine the readily available myths about me. They could not
imagine that someone might show up in his life that actually ... that they could not
imagine all of this as a romantic piece, for sure. [Laughs.] I was thwarting their access to
valuable property that I didn't even know about but they knew about, and what Nijole
said to m e was, if I remember right, 'You came at the last minute and messed everything
up'. I think that was an element in George's plans. I think he intended to mess everything
up. I believe in a certain sense that I was an object in George's death piece. It's no surprise
that he would choose someone with no visible roots with some kind of poetic aspirations.
204 S U S A N L JAROSI
BM: Yes. H e was nice to me, but beyond that, he put things back in perspective. Y o u know,
it was like, T can do whatever I want with this. It's not great art, it's m y creation, you
know, and I'm offering it up to George.' But again, the romantic element: the ritual,
the funeral celebration, and also the celebration of the wedding - the marriage - by
including m e in it and calling it Romantic Piece for George. H e reaffirmed for m e the
fact that I could do what I wanted. I wasn't a pawn of these people.
SJ: H o w did George come up with the idea for the Fluxus Cabaret?
BM: H e thought about it and one day he just said, 'Well, let's do this.' Let's do this piece.
The Cabaret was not planned out step by step. Everyone w h o came would do a piece.
He would say, 'We should have a Renaissance party'. A week later we'd be doing it,
but not just a little party. With costumes, and music, and food, and fascinating people,
and dancing. I had never seen anything like that. Or, 'Let's have this Halloween party',
and there would be all these amazing people there in wonderful costumes.
SJ Y o u were happy and willing to do the Fluxweddingl
BM: I thought it would be ... well, interesting is a neutral word, and yet fun doesn't cover it.
It was a symbolic and poetic thing. I thought it was a beautiful idea. I knew anything
that I did with George would be right. It's hard for m e to tell really h o w people were
reacting to m e because it was a public gathering and a performance atmosphere, and I
don't know that in that scheme of things I was necessarily of great interest as m u c h as
the piece itself. George and I had already gotten married, so that was old news
basically. Everyone was into the performances of the artists there.
SJ: D o you know w h y George picked certain people to have these roles?
B M : I don't know that George picked them as m u c h as everyone came forth and picked
their o w n roles.
SJ: W a s this decided the day of the Cabaret?
B M : I don't know all the makings that went into it. They'd had lots of practice with this
kind of thing and it just, as they say, came together. But I k n o w Geoff [Hendricks] was
responsible for the wedding album afterwards. H e had already done a divorce album
for him and Bici, in which they cut everything in half, including the album. But Geoff,
I think, is obvious because he's gay, and he was openly gay at the time. So it seemed
clear that he should be officiating at such a wedding. A n d the others, I don't know why
they chose these roles. Alison [Knowles] always dressed in this way - she was not a
frilly or a so-called feminine dresser. So that was not unusual for her either.
SJ: I want to k n o wfirstof all w h y you both wore wedding gowns in the Fluxwedding -
why George wanted to be a bride - and then, w h y you were also a bride and not a
groom.
B M : One of George's fantasies was that we travel in Europe as elegant sisters, as he put it.
So he always saw us as two w o m e n - as a couple. I think he just wanted to wear a dress
too. [Laughs.] I could do whatever I wanted, really, and I didn't think about wearing
men's clothes. I just accepted the way that we'd already established - that w e were two
w o m e n together.
SJ: D o you think that this might relate to the Romanian folk tradition known as the
wedding of the dead - where if a girl dies before she is married, the community gives
her both a wedding and a funeral. I'm thinking of this in relation to George wanting to
206 S U S A N L JAROSI
be a bride. For him it might have represented a special rite of passage that needed to be
fulfilled before he died.
B M : I think he was very tied to Lithuania. I'm not sure why. H e would sometimes wake up,
speaking Lithuanian - ask m e what time it was in Lithuanian. So the language was still
something really present to him. I think this custom, this myth, might have been known
to him and forgotten, or it could be something unconscious ... I k n o w that death is
represented as a bride in different cultures. A n d sometimes wearing white. I think that
this was very m u c h a subtext going on at the wedding, as well as the exchange of clothes
[in Black and White]. Because when George ended up with the white dress, basically he
was going into death, and I was staying behind really in the place of order and reality
and taking on a lot more than I started out with, a lot more baggage.
Fluxus has this element of humour and I get the impression that for some people
that's all it is - it's just w h o can m a k e the most elegant joke. But that's what keeps
people guessing about what it is, because there are so m a n y layers and levels - it's just
like a p o e m - and every age it's able to be reinterpreted. George was, I think, one of
those w h o was deceptive, in fact, m y n a m e for him was the Trickster. H e was like
Vulcan. H e could make things out of nothing. H e could present one side, but really be
another thing. H e seemed asexual, seemed almost to some people like an autocrat and
a dictator, seemed almost like he was simple-minded, but the levels at which he thought
belie that characterisation, in m y opinion. Just the Black and White Wedding piece
shows that, for me. H e m a y have gotten very serious at his death, but it all had to be
there somewhere anyway.
SJ: Did you realise that there would be ramifications because of doing this piece publicly,
that people might have a window into your private life?
B M : I knew there would be ramifications from the beginning, because George was coming
out with something that had been hidden. I remember a very funny event that
happened when his sister was at the Massachusetts house, and George was very sick,
H e was lying d o w n in the living-room on a pallet he had there. H e had all these
cabinets on the walls with closed doors and in one of them were wigs on pegs. His sister
went over and opened one and there were all these wigs in there and she just closed it.
She didn't say anything. She didn't say, 'What are these wigs doing here?', or anything.
So that's why I call it denial rather than ignorance.
SJ: After you did the piece publicly, did it have any effect on what George did privately
after that? Did he continue to cross-dress, or did he stop, or was he getting too sick?
B M : H e was getting too sick. I put those clothes ... I packed them up, and I think I gave
them to Barbara Moore, if I'm not mistaken. H e started to lose interest even in music
and became more and more detached from things. H e was so concentrated on his pain.
I was trying to help by cooking things that I thought would help prolong his life. I
mean, I actually thought he was going to live in spite of everything. I was almost
spending all m y timer making soybean things. They were probably the worst thing. I
mean, he probably couldn't digest it. But the doctor kindly told m e that I might have
prolonged his life by a week or two by doing that.
SJ: Can you talk about h o w George gradually introduced you to the cross-dressing? U p
until the public piece.
A N I N T E R V I E W W I T H BILLIE M A C I U N A S 207
I was looking for some warm clothes in the closets. Because the house was a twenty-
room manor house and was full of closets all over and things, odd things all over the
place. One of the oddest things was that there were all these women's dresses in the
closets. So I said, 'Why are there all these women's clothes?' H e told me, 'Well, I like to
dress up; and anytime you want a dress you can take whatever you'd like.' And we
began to dress up together. W e did things like both dress in dresses and heels ... I
considered it drag for myself also ... go into N e w York and walk around Canal Street
where people knew him, but seemed not to bat an eye. H e didn't disguise his voice; he
wore those glasses. They were saying, 'Hi, George!' But no one seemed to question or
give us strange looks. It was the time of m y life. I had a great time with George.
Either then or some point [later] he told m e he liked to be beaten and would I beat
him. There was a ritual. H e said he was masochistic. I didfindin his belongings one of
these sado-masochistic correspondence things. That was sort of forbidden and adult to
me at the time. It was just one of those pornographic .. .Well, it was like a magazine
that had addresses of people who were into this, photographs ... Thefirsttime it
happened I was up in the attic. I didn't know he was coming up there. I heard this
clonk, clonk, clonk as he came up the threeflightsof stairs and then he was knocking
at m y door. I opened it and there he was. H e had this dress with heels, and a wig, I
think, and this old mustard-coloured sweater that he always wore around there over
top of all of it. H e had a little whip, a little horse whip that you use with a buggy or
something. H e asked m e if I would please tie him to the bed and hit him with the whip.
And I did. I hit his legs mostly.
Did he explain to you why he wanted you to do this? What the ritual had to be?
W e didn't do it a lot. H e said he was masochistic. H e asked m e if I would sometimes
slap him in public. If he found it erotic I was willing to do it. It was a fun and
interesting kind of role for m e to play. I think it was at that time that I wrote to the
psychologist, because I was a little nervous about it. I don't know whether I mentioned
cross-dressing to him. But I was half shocked and half amused at [the psychologist's]
response. I just thought he was over-reacting. I think I wanted some advice I could use.
Something more sympathetic and with a more thorough understanding of the whole
situation. H e was the person who had taught m e this [relaxation] technique, so I
thought he could possibly have some other ideas. I don't know whether he had ever
dealt with a person who had cancer or was that much in pain before. It was in that
sense a call for help. I saw that he was not a person who was going to be able to help
me. But, again, if George was all right with it; and I wasn't afraid of George. H e was
totally harmless. But I did start to have weird images more connected with m y own
childhood or something, of scary people in the attic and fears of being pushed down
the stairs and things like that. Ghosts and bad spirits and that sort of thing. At any
rate, I just decided to get into it as a role and to do what he asked.
Did he ever indicate how this came to be for him? What role it fulfilled, or what kind of
pleasure he got out of it?
I sensed that the exploration of his feminine side, including the cross-dressing and the
masochism - although I would be reluctant to associate masochism with feminine
necessarily - had something to do with his childhood. I know one time he had
208 S U S A N L JAROSI
appendicitis and had to be operated on without anaesthetic, and he was just put on a
table in the h o m e and cut open. H e remembered it as extremely painful and frightening
and traumatic, and he talked about it several times in relationship to enjoying pain. He
also said he was in so m u c h pain that the beating distracted him from the pain, the
internal pain. So both those things were going on.
SJ: H o w m a n y times did this happen?
B M : T w o or three times. O n e of the things he wanted to do that he didn't was to produce a
deck of cards with this theme, with he and I and others as the characters on the cards.
Peter Moore actually came up and Larry Miller and Larry's girlfriend at the time
[Sarah Seagull], who's also an artist. There were photographs, and Peter probably has
them. There is m e in a corset with a whip and others. I don't k n o w h o w far we got.
That was never a realised project, but I think the photos are around somewhere.
SJ: Y o u said you started to have fearful images of bad things happening in the attic and
falling down stairs, so it must have been touching your psyche on some level.
B M : Well, George was a very incongruous sight. Y o u know, dressed up. H e wasn't
professional. H e did it very haphazardly. O n e of the things he liked m e to do after that
was put make-up on him to make him look better. But he could be a little bit bizarre,
just showing up at your door like that, and the sound of the footsteps coming up stairs,
things like that, you know, uninvited. [Laughs.] It was a huge house. It was cold. Long
winter, so dark a lot. Just the two of us. All this was new. It was a, say, anxiety-
producing situation, so these images ...
SJ: H o w did you account to yourself for the fact that the intimate part of your relationship
didn't continue after he came back from the cancer treatments in Jamaica? W a s he just
too ill?
B M : Yeah, it was really heartbreaking for m e to be left out. H e was going to leave from his
family's house to go to Jamaica, and I was not invited down to visit with the family at
Eastertime. I was not asked if I wanted to go to Jamaica. I was bewildered mostly, and
hurt. I could not for the life of m e figure it out. It would not occur to m e right off the
bat that these people had their o w n reasons for doing it, and that they were degrading
themselves. W h a t I felt was that there was a problem with m e , that I was not
acceptable. H e was on his way out the door to Jamaica. I was there to say good-bye,
and I was crying. The tears were just... George was so tender, and he said, 'Don't cry.
I'm going to be back soon, and I'll come back well'. A n d there were times when I
thought he really would be well. But I don't k n o w whether somehow other factors
coming in, Watts' demand for money, his sister's demand for money, and other things
were making him think that he needed to be responsible.
SJ: But you stopped giving the therapy.
B M : I did because the time that I was doing this therapy, was sort of a clutch at straws. It
was not meant to cure, it was only meant to help him relax. But he took them as erotic
experiences. After he was diagnosed it just didn't seem to make any sense. H e was
taking morphine, which was like that was the only hope. That was what was going to
help him relax. I think he was just like I was - pulled into a really ugly place by all of
these importunate people and that he couldn't see his way to dying peacefully.
SJ: From what you knew of the group, did you think sex had a role in Fluxus?
A N I N T E R V I E W W I T H BILLIE M A C I U N A S 209
B M : Apparently very little. Well, there was Shigeko Kubota's Vagina Painting, and Kristine
[Stiles] wrote about the sort of w o m e n w h o were involved and their performances that
explored their sensual world in relationship to objects. But I think that was just ... it
was very minor. I'm not saying their work was minor - it was extremely important, but
it wasn't a part of the larger, on-going conversation that I heard.
SJ: Would you suspect anybody else in the group was hiding part of their sexuality?
B M : [Laughs.] N o , I'm laughing because I imagine most people hide something of their
sexuality. Let's see. W h a t would I say to that? I don't think anyone wanted their ideas
of w h o George was disturbed at that late date. They wanted it to be neat. That's why I
think it has a very, in the history of George's activities, it has a minor or almost a
footnote quality. But it's extremely important because it shows him as ahead of
Fluxus, basically - m u c h more willing to explore those forbidden boundaries than
anybody else was. N o b o d y else cross-dressed except at the wedding.
SJ: Let's talk about what George saw in the cross-dressing. W a s it an aesthetic thing? W a s
it part of his philosophy of Fluxus?
B M : Well, he told m e he'd been doing it since nine. So it couldn't have been a philosophy
about Fluxus per se. But I think he worked it in, certainly in the Black and White piece.
I think it was an aesthetic and erotic thing for him. By the time of the wedding it had
become clear that George was a cross-dresser to anyone w h o had any sense.
SJ: A n d exploring boundaries.
B M : Exactly. I think his family had sort of very bourgeois pretensions, so it was not like it
would have been something really accessible to him. H e talked about other fantasies
like having a torture chamber with medieval torture instruments to be on exhibit,
things like that.
SJ: As a piece.
B M : Right. H e would have I think explored this to a greater degree if he had lived longer. It
just became something that was accessible to him at that point.
SJ: H o w do you think the group would have reacted to him if his work had moved in that
direction? Carolee Schneemann, for example, was doing explorations of female
sexuality and never was embraced by the group. Y o u can only speculate, but ...
B M : I think the degree of sexism in Fluxus was due to the times. There were many
assumptions that were played out that remained unexplored. George's cross-dressing
was an over-exploration of some of these assumptions. I found him to be one of the
least sexist people I knew. But still he was upset that I didn't use his name. So there
were these surprising pockets of conventionality. I think some people would have
raised their eyebrows and said, 'What is going on? This is that horrible woman's
influence', or whatever. But there were people w h o really trusted George's ability like I
did; they would have come along.
SJ: I wonder if cross-dressing would have ever been accepted as a Fluxus activity?
B M : I think ... he m a y have become something other than Fluxus. Or else either Fluxus
would incorporate this or else he would start on another branch. Yeah, I don't think he
would abandon it just because they wouldn't like it. I doubt that seriously.
SJ: D o you think cross-dressing in any way took the place of intercourse for George?
B M : I'm not really sure. I don't k n o w what prevented him from having a sexual
210 S U S A N L JAROSI
relationship. People said he was dominated by his mother; maybe he was afraid to
marry someone and take that step, that right of passage into separation from his
family. Fluxus and his family were separate. O r he didn't find it necessary, or he found
it too m u c h trouble because he was too busy with Fluxus. I don't k n o w the answers to
those questions. W e didn't have intercourse, but w e contemplated it. I think he was just
really sick. But whether it actually would ever have happened I have no idea. I know
for myself I really wanted sex with George. I wanted to have a real sexual relationship
with him. A n d that was part of the sense of loss when he died.
SJ: Could you tell m e where you are now, after almost twenty years have passed since
these events.
BM: Well, the estate money is spent. I don't have very m a n y objects. I was bent on getting
an education and I got it, the whole thing. Fluxus has been a sort of part of it, but not a
big part of it. I'm applying for a grant to go and translate poetry in Portugal. I chose a
poet who's extremely feminine and passionate and lyrical and doesn'tfitany modernist
mode, including anything related to Fluxus. If I do get this grant to go to Portugal it
seems to m e to be the end of a cycle, because that's kind of where I started. That's the
first direction I had ... George's influence ... I was fairly, let's say, not nihilistic as a
philosophy, but I had some self-destructive tendencies from a bad childhood. And
George's influence m a d e m e decide to value myself. The practical application of his
statement enabled m e to get an education. I've gone through a huge socialisation
process. H e was a very, very important person in m y life. I don't think it would have
turned out as well if I hadn't met George. I went to Portugal to escape all the madness
after he died, and if I go back this time it will be under very different circumstances:
knowing the language, having a project, being able to produce a book of translations,
having contacts and some money. It's sort of summing up of a whole process. That's
h o w I would view it. So I'm still a Fluxobject and I'm still being processed. Well,
George was a Fluxobject to m e too. He's an object - he's a poetic object, a poetic
subject. A n d that's why the marriage was a marriage for me. That is why I see it as a
marriage. It doesn't m a k e any difference to m e that it was three months.
SJ: Y o u said you haven't had m a n y contacts or ties with the group. D o you feel like you
will be moving even further away from Fluxus with your work? Is that what you want?
BM: I'm not really running away from Fluxus, it's just that there wasn't anything for m e to
do there, and I didn't like the role that seemed cut out for m e after George died. I had
m y o w n agenda, and I've been following that. It's like Gayatri Spivak said, 'You
cannot not want legitimisation'. I'm m u c h less of a rebel than I was. I've got this all
important education; I have been validated in other ways for m y o w n intellectual
achievements. I think n o w I can see Fluxus as an interesting and not exactly past, but
historically past part, but in m y o w n mind a continuing process because he [George]
was the impetus for all this Portuguese poetry development. But when that phase is
over, I'll write m y o w n poetry as I always have since I was a child. So I'm not running
away from Fluxus at all, not bitter about it or anything. But I guess I still see myself as
[a] footnote kind of.
SJ: A s opposed to what?
BM: A part.
A N INTERVIEW WITH BILLIE M A C I U N A S 211
Maybe you are an ordinary person and might like to do something Fluxus - should you first
determine whether Fluxus is dead or alive?
Maybe you have accidentally already done something Fluxus - how would you know it was
Fluxus?
Maybe you decide to intentionally do something Fluxus - should you organise and announce
a public performance or make an uninvited appearance, anywhere, anytime?
Maybe you are an artist and think that Fluxus still lives - will doing Fluxactivity make
famous or make you a better person?
Maybe you are an artist and think that Fluxus is dead - will doing Fluxactivity make you
only a tasteful postmodern historicist or independent practitioner of Fluxism, or will it make
you a mere academic classicist, old fart and necrophiliac?
Maybe you are a serious thinker - will Fluxactivity reward your hard work?
Maybe you just want to have some fun and need some other playmates - will Fluxus
love you?
Maybe you think Fluxus still lives and you are an anti-artist, a social critic, a malcon
just full of hormones - will Fluxactivity give any relief to your urges?
Maybe you are an anti-artist and think Fluxus is dead - will the bones of Fluxus laying i
some Museleum, provide you with any fuel?
Maybe you are an artist and think that a lot of Fluxus pieces are really the same idea -
you put them all individually on one programme or condense them all into a single piece?
Maybe you wonder if there is certain attire for Fluxperformance - should you get any
c o m m o n worker's uniform, get nude, get a tuxedo and gown, cross-dress or simply come-as-
you-are?
Maybe you think you need help to give a good Fluxconcert - should you consult someone
experienced or throw I Ching?
MAYBE FLUXUS 213
Maybe you might prefer to give a boring Fluxconcert - should you pick all boring pieces,
have all boring performers or arrange to get a boring audience?
Maybe you think that a Fluxconcert should be intellectually stimulating, socially shockin
culturally provocative in general - should you update yourself on what is politically correct
by advance study of the particular audience, institution, country or the local papers?
Maybe you think that a Fluxconcert should be funny - should it be funny like Shakespeare
funny like Kierkegaard?
Maybe you think there is a secret Fluxinitiation - should you make a discreet inquiry or
between the lines?
Maybe you are an art critic, theoretician or professional thinker and think Fluxus is dead -
should you render Fluxusfinalin a seamless exegesis or should you give a wink and let
sleeping dogs lie?
Maybe you think Fluxus still lives and you would like to textualise its progress and historical
relevance - should you be obliged to read everything written and also look at each and every
one of Peter Moore's 350,000 photographs?
Maybe you wonder whether Fluxus should be Upper or lower case, hyphenated or run-
together - shouldn't we be able to find that out in the Chicago Manual of Style:
Maybe you heard Philip Corner once say words like 'They might have buried Fluxus, but the
joke is that nothing was in the coffin,' - should you surmise that Fluxus wants to be immortal
or that it just thinks death is good material too?
Maybe you read that Bob Watts said, T h e most important thing about Fluxus is that no one
knows what it is'; and T see Fluxus everywhere I go,' - should we hope there is a chance that
someday Fluxus will be resolved with the other forces into a Unified Field Theory?
Maybe you think Fluxus, dead-or-alive, is just neo-Dada - should we therefore anticipate
either a post-appropriationism or a post-plagiarism with the appearance of neo-Fluxus?
Maybe you think that whatever Fluxus may be is contained in some postmodernist
phenomenon - would we be any the less wiser to look upon it as East-West protestism,
catharticism, hinderism, buddyism or confUsionism?
[1991]
PARTV
TWO FLUXUS THEORIES
DICK HIGGINS:
FLUXUS: THEORY AND RECEPTION1
This is not an introductory text on Fluxus. T o explain what Fluxus is and was and where it
came from is not m y primary purpose at this time, having already done so in m y long essay
'Postface' (1962) and m y short one, 'A Child's History of Fluxus', among other pieces as well.
Others have done so too, of course, each in his or her o w n way. M y concern here is to try and
deal with some aspects and questions in Fluxus - what do w e experience when w e encounter a
Fluxus work? W h y is it what it is? Is there anything unique about it? A n d so on.
nineteenth-century style, with one leg in the future and one in the conventional past and not
too m u c h in the present. Considering that the two legs are moving in opposite directions, it is
no wonder that Futurism falls a littleflatin the evolution of modern sensibility. O f course, it
is of great technical and historical interest, as a starter and a precursor, but its works have
only moderate intrinsic interest as works.
Dada, when one looks at it in isolation, seems more unique than it is. But most of the
D a d a artists and writers came out of Expressionism; and if one compares the Dada
materials with those of their immediate antecedents, they are less unique than one might
have imagined. Perhaps an anecdote is appropriate here. In the 1950s and 1960s the
journalistic image of D a d a had become so extreme, so far from the reality of the work, that
D a d a was considered to be the limit of the extremely crazy in art - as wild as possible, as
droll as possible, simply inexpressibly 'far-out', to cite the slang of the time. Thus, early
happenings and Fluxus (like the works of Rauschenberg and Johns) were often dismissed as
'neo-Dada'. This was, of course, extremely annoying and embarrassing to those of us who
knew what D a d a was or had been. For example, I knew several of the old Dadaists, had
been raised on their work, and there was no doubt in m y mind that what w e happenings and
Fluxus people were doing had rather little to do with Dada. Well, returning to m y story, in
due course I became the director of Something Else Press, a small publishing firm. I knew
that before the split between the French and G e r m a n Dadaists, Richard Huelsenbeck had
published an anthology of D a d a materials, the Dada Almanack, I therefore got his
permission to reissue it in facsimile. The response to it was very revealing: I was told that
this was 'not real Dada!' The material seemed too conservative, far too close to the
Expressionism of the pre-First World W a r years to gibe with the image that m y 1960s
friends and colleagues had built up in their mind as to what D a d a was. Yet Huelsenbeck was
not, at the time he did the Dada Almanach, a conservative at all. H e had published a wildly
leftist booklet, Deutschland mufi untergehenl ('Germany Must Perish!'), and he saw no
difference between political and cultural innovation and revolutionary thinking. His poems
were as experimental as those of the other Dadaists, Raoul H a u s m a n n for example. In other
words, the journalistic myth had come to replace the substance to such an extent that the
substance was overwhelmed.
Surrealism is, of course, an outgrowth of Dada, historically. It was, quite self-consciously,
a 'movement', unlike Dada, which was more unruly, spontaneous perhaps, and undirected.
Surrealism was presided over by the relatively benevolent Trotskyite litterateur, Andre
Breton. Breton was m u c h given to cafe politics, to reading people out of his movement or
claiming them for it, proclaiming them and disowning them according to their conformity or
non-conformity with the theoretical positions that he built up analogously to Marxist
theorising in his various Surrealist manifestos. Ideology m a y have masked personal feeling in
m a n y cases - as if to say, 'If you hate m e , you must be ideologically incorrect'. The
commonplace about Surrealism is that it is of two sorts - historical and popular. Historical
Surrealism usually refers to what was going on in Breton's circle from the mid-1920s until the
late 1930s in Paris (or in Europe as a whole), usually involving the transformation of social,
aesthetic, scientific and philosophical values by means of the liberation of the subconscious.
This led, of course, to a kind of art in which fantastic visions were depicted extremely
literally. A concern with the subconscious was, of course, typical of the time, and the story is
T H E O R Y A N D RECEPTION 219
told of that great liberator of the subconscious, Sigmund Freud, that someone asked him
about surrealistic art. His reply? Normally, he said, in art he looked to see the unconscious
meaning of a work, but in surrealistic art he looked to see if there was a conscious one. Well,
to return to m y main concerns, with the passage of time and of the entry of Surrealism into
popular awareness, 'surrealistic' came to be more or less synonymous with 'fantastic' or
'dreamy' in art. Popular Surrealism, then, has little to do with historical Surrealism, although
careless critics tend to equate the two.
However, historical Surrealism has a far fuller history than our usual image of it. Breton
lived into the 1960s, and as long as he lived, 'Surrealism' as a self-conscious, self-constricted
movement continued, with new people joining and old members being obliged to withdraw.
During the years of the Second World War, and immediately after, Breton and many of the
Surrealists lived in the United States, and their impact is not sufficiently understood either in
Europe or America. They became the most interesting presence in the American art world.
Magazines such as VVV and View were the most exciting art magazines of the time. The
Surrealists constituted the nucleus of the avant-garde. Some of us who later did Fluxus works
were very conscious of this. I, for example, attended school with Breton's daughter Aubee
('Obie', to us) and, being curious about what her father wrote, acquired a couple of his books.
Furthermore, from time to time there would be Surrealist 'manifestations', and some of these
were similar to the 'environments' out of which happenings developed. These were, in any case,
locked into our sensibility, as points of reference in considering our earlier art experiences, and
Surrealism was absolutely the prototypical art movement, as such, for Americans at the time.
W e shall return to this issue, but I would like to consider a few points along the way:
1 Fluxus seems to be a series of separate and discrete formal experiments, without much to
them together. In this way it seems to resemble Futurism. This is a point I will answer when I
presently address the actual ontology of Fluxus.
2 Fluxus seems to be like Dada - at least like the popular image of Dada - in being crazy,
iconoclastic, essentially a negative tendency rejecting all its precedents, and so on. In fact,
is some truth to this: but it is oblique. Fluxus was never so undirected as Dada, never so close t
its historical precedents. Dada was, in fact, a point of discussion on those long nights at
Ehlhalten-am-Taunus, during the first Fluxus Festival at Wiesbaden in 1962, when George
Maciunas, myself, Alison Knowles, and, occasionally, others would talk into the small hours of
the morning, trying to determine what would be the theoretical nature of this tendency to which
we were giving birth, which we found ourselves participating in. Maciunas was intensely aware
of the rivalry between the French and German Dadaists; we wanted to keep our group together
and avoid such splits as best we could. What could we do to prevent this fissioning? The answer
was to avoid having too tight an ideological line. Maciunas proposed a manifesto during that
1962 festival - it is sometimes printed as a 'Fluxus Manifesto'. But nobody was willing to sign it
We didnot want to confine tomorrow's possibilities by what we thought today. That manifesto is
Maciunas' manifesto, not a manifesto of Fluxus.
3 Surrealism lasted more or less forty years as a viable tendency, and, among other things,
spun off a popular version, as I have said, lower-case surrealism. This seemed like a fine model
for the Fluxus people. But how could we make Surrealism a model for Fluxus?
220 DICK HIGGINS
One must, here, bear in mind that Fluxus was something which happened more or less by
chance. In the late 1950s there were the Fluxus artists, sometimes thinking of themselves as a
group, doing the work that later became k n o w n as Fluxus. But the work and the group had
no name. W e did not consciously present ourselves to the public as a group until Maciunas
organised his festival at Wiesbaden, intended originally as publicity for the series of
publications he intended to issue that were to be called Fluxus. The festival caused great
notoriety, was on G e r m a n television, and was repeated in various cities beside Wiesbaden,
which is well documented elsewhere and need not concern us here. The point I a m getting at
here is that in connection with this festival the newspapers and media began to refer to us as
die Fluxus Leute ('the Fluxus people'), and so here w e were, people from very different
backgrounds: Knowles, Vostell and Brecht originally painters; Watts a sculptor; Patterson,
myself and Paik composers; Williams, myself and M a c L o w writers, and so on. Here we were
being told that w e were the Fluxus people. W h a t should that mean? If w e were to be identified
publicly as a group, should w e become one? W h a t did w e have in c o m m o n ?
Thus the concept arose of constituting ourselves as some kind of 'collective'. Maciunas
was particularly pleased by that idea, since he had a leftist background, and, instinctively, a
major portion of his approach to organising us and our festivals had at least a metaphorical
relationship with leftist ideology and forms. The collective clearly needed a spokesman, to be
what a commissar was supposed to be in the U S S R but seldom was. Maciunas was not really
an artist but a graphic designer, and, as editor of the magazine, seemed the best suited of us
to be the commissar of Fluxus, a role he assumed and held until his dying day. In this there
was a parallel to the role of Andre Breton in Surrealism - less monolithic and more
ceremonial, of course. W e never accepted Maciunas' right to 'read people out of the
movement', as Breton did. Occasionally he tried to do this, but the others did not follow him
here - we would continue to work with the artist w h o was banned by Maciunas until,
eventually, Maciunas usually got over his o w n impulse to ban and accepted the artist back
into the group. Surrealism without Breton is inconceivable, but valuable though Maciunas'
contributions were, Fluxus can and did and does exist without him, in one or another sense.
Thus, to sum up this part of the discussion, w e saw Futurism as important, but as having
no strong or direct relationship with us in any direct sense. D a d a works w e admired, but the
negative side of it - its rejections and the social dynamic of its members, splitting and feuding
- we did not wish to emulate. Surrealism had, perhaps, minimal influence on us so far as
form, style and content were concerned, but its group dynamic seemed suitable for our use,
subject only to the limitations on Maciunas' authority which lay in our nature as having
already been a group with some aspects of our work in c o m m o n before Maciunas ever
arrived on the scene.
Fluxus was (and is) therefore:
3 The kind of works associated with these publications, artists and performances which w
(and do) together;
THEORY A N D RECEPTION 221
4 Any other activities which were in the lineage or tradition which was built up, over a period
of time, that are associated with the publications, artists or performances (such as Fluxfeasts).
Fluxus was not a movement; it has no stated, consistent programme or manifesto which
the work must match, and it did not propose to m o v e art or our awareness of art from
point A to point B. The very name, Fluxus, suggests change, being in a state of flux. The
idea was that it would always reflect the most exciting avant-garde tendencies of a given
time or m o m e n t - the Fluxattitude - and it would always be open for new people to 'join'.
All they had to do was to produce works which were in some way similar to what other
Fluxus artists were doing. Thus, the original core group expanded to include, in its second
wave (after Wiesbaden), Ben Vautier, Eric Andersen, T o m a s Schmit and Willem de Ridder;
in the third wave (by 1966), Geoffrey Hendricks and K e n Friedman; and, in the later waves
(after 1970), Yoshimasa W a d a , Jean Dupuy, Larry Miller, and others. It was thought of as
something that would exist parallel to other developments, providing a rostrum for its
members and a purist model for the most technically innovative and spiritually challenging
work of its changing time(s). Theoretically, therefore, even though Maciunas died years
ago, a new artist could become a Fluxus artist even today, according to that formula. W h y
he or she might want to or not want to is a different matter, of course, but theoretically it
could happen. It would simply require assent a m o n g all w h o were concerned - the other
Fluxus artists and the new artist.
Before w e leave this matter of antecedents and basic definition, it would be well to
mention some individual artists w h o are sometimes reckoned among the forefathers of
Fluxus, and a few of those w h o are thought of as Fluxus but w h o are not.
W h e n Ben Vautier speaks of Fluxus, he usually evokes the names of John Cage and
Marcel D u c h a m p so repeatedly that one might well wonder if he had ever heard of any other
artists at all. N o r is he the only person of w h o m this is true.
Well, the fact is, both Cage and D u c h a m p are m u c h admired by us Fluxus artists.
Duchamp is admired largely for the interpenetration of art and life in his corpus of works;
the 'art/life dichotomy', as w e used to call it in the early 1960s, is resolved in his works by the
interpenetration of the one into the other. In 1919, as is well known, D u c h a m p exhibited a
men's urinal as an art work - a simple, white and pristine object, classical in form, when one
separates it from its traditional function. Since m a n y Fluxus pieces (most notably the
performance ones), are often characterised by their taking of a very ordinary event from daily
life, and their being framed as art by being presented on a stage in a performance situation,
there is a clear connection between such Fluxus pieces and Duchamp's urinal. For example,
one often-performed Fluxus piece is Mieko, formerly 'Chieko', Shiomi's Disappearing Event,
in which the performer(s) come on stage and smile, gradually relaxing their faces until the
smile disappears. This is something which often happens in daily life, and it is refreshing to
think of an art performance which is both daily and uninsulated from one's diurnal, non-art
existence - unlike most art works.
Nevertheless, apart from a handful of musical experiments, D u c h a m p never did a
performance work, nor did he have any great interest in them. At Allan Kaprow's seminal
18 Happenings in 6 Parts, thefirsthappening presented in N e w York (in which I performed,
and which has some oblique relationship with Fluxus), he was in the audience and I watched
222 DICK HIGGINS
him; he seemed quite uninterested in what he was seeing, and I do not recall that he even
stayed through the entire performance. It seems doubtful that he saw any particular
connection between the performance that he was watching and his o w n work. Nor, later,
when he knew some of us and our work, did he see such a connection then either. It was
always his effort to m a k e life visually elegant; we, on the other hand, chose to leave life
alone, to observe it as a biological phenomenon, to watch it come and recede again, and to
comment on it and enrich it in or with our works. W h e n one sees a D u c h a m p work, one
knows whether it is sculpture or painting or whatever; with a Fluxus work, there is a
conceptual fusion - 'intermedia' is the term I chose for such fusions, picking it up from
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, w h o had used it in 1812. Virtually all Fluxus works are
intermedial by their very nature: visual poetry, poetic visions, action music and musical
actions, happenings and events that are bounded, conceptually, by music, literature and
visual art, and whose heart lies in the middle ground a m o n g these. D u c h a m p was an extreme
purist; w e were not, are not. H e therefore makes an awkward ancestor for us, much as we
m a y admire his integrity and his geste.
Cage is rather a different matter. S o m e of us (myself, Brecht, Maxfield, Hansen and
others) had studied with Cage. But in his case, like D u c h a m p , he strove towards 'nobility'.
This, for him, meant the impersonal or the transpersonal - often obtained by means of
systems employing chance, in order to transcend his o w n taste. M a c L o w , Brecht,
Maxfield and myself used chance systems - 'aleatoric structures' - but few of the other
Fluxus artists did, at least with any frequency. A s for Cage, he seemed to find Fluxus
works simplistic when hefirstsaw them. They did (and do) often employ some extreme
minimalism which was not one of his concerns. Fluxus pieces can also be quite personal,
and this would place them beyond Cage's pale. His o w n work is seldom intermedial.
Although he writes poems and composes music, one tends to k n o w which is which. They
are multimedial, like operas.
Cage and D u c h a m p should therefore be thought of more as uncles of Fluxus rather than
as direct progenitors or father figures. Fluxus, it seems, is a mongrel art, with no distinct
parentage or pedigree. There is a relationship to Cage and to D u c h a m p , but it is mostly by
affinity and the example of integrity, rather than developing out of their work in any specific
way.
The way I like to sum up this part of the history of 'it all' is as follows:
/ Once upon a time there was collage, a technique. Collage could be used in art, not ju
visual art.
2 When collage began to project off the two-dimensional surface, it became the combine
(Rauschenberg's term?).
3 When the combine began to envelop the spectator it became the environment. I don't kn
who coined that term, but it is still a current one.
4 When the environment began to include live performance, it became the happening (Alla
Kaprow's term, usually capitalised in order to distinguish it from just anything that happ
THEORY A N D RECEPTION 223
5 When happenings were broken up into their minimal constituent parts, they became events. I
first heard that term from Henry Cowell, a composer with whom both John Cage, and, many
years later, I myself studied. Any art work can be looked at as a collation of events, but for
works that tend to fissure and split into atomised elements, this approach by event seems
particularly appropriate.
6 When events were minimal, but had maximum implications, they became one of the key
things which Fluxus artists typically did (and do) in their performances. That is, I think, the
real lineage of Fluxus.
A further digression into language seems in order here. In Fluxus one often speaks of
Fluxfestivals, Fluxconcerts, Fluxpeople, Fluxartists, Fluxevents; I'm afraid I'm to blame for
that one. Maciunas was very m u c h interested in the odd byways of Baroque art. I told him
about the work of the G e r m a n Baroque poet, Quirinus Kuhlmann (1644-88), w h o was a
messianic sort w h o was eventually burnt at the stake in Moscow, where he had gone in an
effort to persuade the Tsar that he was a reincarnation of Christ. Kuhlmann wrote various
exciting books of poetry using 'protean' forms and other unconventional means, among
which is the Kuhlpsalter. This includes Kuhlpsalms, evidently to be performed on Ktihldays
by Kiihlpeople, and so on. Maciunas was delighted by this, and thenceforth made parallel
constructions of his o w n that were based on it, as mentioned, 'Fluxfests' or 'Fluxfestivals', to
be performed by 'Fluxfriends' w h o were also 'Fluxartists', wearing 'Fluxclothes' and eating
'Fluxfood', and so on. This dissociated such artists, festivals, from regular ones; one was not
an 'artist' or even an 'anti-artist' (as m a n y observers accused us of being) but a 'Fluxartist',
which was presumably something quite different.
But, to summarise the discussion so far, the better one knows the Fluxworks, the less they
resemble Futurism, Dada, Surrealism, D u c h a m p or Cage.
ambitious critic then claims as a movement or tendency in the hopes of earning professional
credits. But if these points are too artificial, if there is no natural grouping which enforces the
feeling that these works belong together, it will soon be forgotten as a grouping. But with a
real movement, the life of the movement continues to take place until the programme has
been achieved; at that point the movement dies a natural death, and the artists if they are still
active, go on to do something else.
Fluxus had (and has) no prescriptive programme. Its constituent works were never
intended to change the world of cultural artefacts which surrounded them, though it might
affect h o w they were to be seen. Fluxus did not so m u c h attack its surrounding art context as
ignore it. Nevertheless, there are some points in c o m m o n a m o n g most Fluxworks:
1 internationalism, 2 experimentalism and iconoclasm, 3 intermedia, 4 minimalism or con-
centration, 5 an attempted resolution of the art/life dichotomy, 6 implicativeness, 7 play or
gags, 8 ephemerality, and 9 specificity. These nine points - they are almost criteria - can be
taken up one by one.
Fluxus arose more or less spontaneously in various countries. In Europe there were, in the
beginning (others joined shortly afterwards), Wolf Vostell, N a m June Paik, Emmett Williams
and Ben Patterson, a m o n g others. In the United States there were, besides myself, Alison
Knowles, George Brecht, Robert Watts, and the others I have already named; also La Monte
Young, Philip Corner, A y - 0 and still others. In Japan there were Takehisa Kosugi and
Mieko Shiomi and more. Probably there were about two dozen of us in six countries, with
little besides our intentions in c o m m o n (for one thing, not all of us had studied with Cage).
Thus, Fluxus was not, for example, the creature of the N e w York art scene, the West German
art scene, the Parisian one or anything else of that sort. It was, from its outset, international.
At one point Maciunas tried, in structuring his proposed Fluxus collections, to re-nationalise
it, but it simply did not work.
It was a coming together of experimental artists, that is, of artists w h o were not
interested in doing what all the other artists were doing at the time; they mostly took an
iconoclastic attitude towards the conventions of the art establishments of their various
countries, and m a n y have since paid the price of doing so, which is obscurity and poverty.
This took the form in all cases, however, of experimentation with form rather than content
as such. There was the assumption that new content requires new forms, that new forms
enable works to have new content leading on to new experiences. In m a n y cases this
experimentalism led the artists into intermedia - to visual poetry, some varieties of
Happenings, sound poetry and so on.
In order to state such forms in a very concentrated way, a great measure of purity was
necessary, so that the nature of the form would be clear. O n e could not have too many
extraneous or diverse elements in a work. This led, inevitably, to a stress on brevity, since
there would, by keeping a work short or small, be less time for extraneous elements to enter
in and to interfere. This brevity constituted a specific sort of minimalism, with as much
concentration in a work as possible. La Monte Y o u n g wrote a musical piece that could last
forever, using just two pitches. In 1982 Wolf Vostell composed a Fluxus opera using just
three words from the Bible for his libretto. George Brecht wrote m a n y Fluxus events in his
' Water Yam series, using just a very few words - three in one event, twenty in another, two in
a third, and so on.
T H E O R Y A N D RECEPTION 225
Working so close to the minimum possible made the Fluxus artists intensely conscious of
the possibility that what they did would not be art at all in any acceptable sense. Yet there
was also the sense that most art work was unsatisfying anyway, that life was far more
interesting. Thus there was a great deal of attention given to the resolutions of the art/life
dichotomy, which has already been mentioned.
There was a sense that working with these materials implied an avoidance of the personal
expression which was so characteristic of the arts in the period just before Fluxus began, in
the early and mid-1950s. But the personal, as a genre, was by no means rejected out of hand
in Fluxus if it could be presented in a way that was not overly subjective, which would be
limited in relevance. Thus, Alison Knowles performed with her infant daughter, for example.
There was also the danger that working with such minimal material would lead to facile
meanderings, to Fluxartists grinding out endless mountains of minimalist pieces which had
no real raison d'etre. Thus a very important criterion for avoiding this danger came to be the
notion that a Fluxpiece, whether an object or a performance, should be as implicative as
possible, that it should imply a m a x i m u m of intellectual, sensuous or emotional content
within its minimum of material.
In the period just before Fluxus began, the dominant style in visual art had been Abstract
Expressionism and in music had been post-Webernite Serialism. Both of these were apt to be
extremely solemn and tendentious affairs indeed, and, in fact, seriousness tended to be
equated with solemnity. Fluxus tended often to react against this by moving in the direction
of humour and gags, introducing a much-needed spirit of play into the arts. This also fitted
well with the iconoclastic side of Fluxus.
There was also the sense that if Fluxus were to incorporate some element of on-going
change - flux - that the individual works should change. M a n y of the Fluxus objects
therefore were made of rather ephemeral materials, such as paper or light plastic, so that as
time went by the work would either disappear or would physically alter itself. A
masterpiece in this context was a work that m a d e a strong statement rather than a work
that would last throughout the ages in some treasure vault. Also, most of the Fluxartists
were (and are) very poor, and so they could not afford to work with fine and costly
materials. M a n y of Robert Filliou's works have disappeared into the air, for example,
though other Fluxworks are, in fact, m a d e of standard materials and will perhaps last (for
example, works by Vostell or myself).
Maciunas' background, as I have already mentioned, was in graphic and industrial design.
The design approach is usually to design specific solutions to specific problems. Designers
characteristically distrust universals and vague generalities. Generalisations are used in
Fluxus works only when they are handled with all the precision of specific categories and
necessities. They must not be vague. This was, typically, Maciunas' approach and it remains
typical for us n o w that he is gone.
Clearly not every work is likely to reflect all nine of these characteristics or criteria, but the
more of them a work reflects, the more typically and characteristically Fluxus it is. Similarly,
not every work by a Fluxartist is a Fluxwork; typically Fluxartists do other sorts of work as
well, just as a collagist might also print, or a composer of piano music might try his hand at
writing something for an orchestra. In this way also Fluxus differs from music. All the work
of a Surrealist was expected to be surrealistic. A n Abstract Expressionist would be unlikely to
226 DICK HIGGINS
let us say, everyone w h o m Maciunas published in his lifetime. In any case, Maciunas
published other works besides pure Fluxus ones, even in that most quintessential of
Fluxpublications, the occasional newspaper CC V TRE, so such a list would not be very
useful except as a beginning. N e w artists, even those w h o have never heard of Fluxus or
Maciunas m a y very well do Fluxworks inadvertently if they match the nine criteria.
And if the works in question do not match the criteria, then they are not Fluxworks, even
if the artist claims they are. W h a t they do m a y be very interesting, of course. But it is not
Fluxus. For example, some m u s e u m shows of Fluxus include pieces that do not reflect these
criteria. The pieces tend to look rather incongruous in context, and they reflect ill upon the
museum director's intelligence more than anything else. The inclusion of big names m a y be
good for the attendance at a show, but it tends to obfuscate or vulgarise something that
should be perfectly clear. For example, in 1981 there was an exhibition at Wuppertal in the
Federal Republic of Germany, 'Fluxus: Aspekt eines Phanomens' ('Fluxus: Aspects of a
Phenomenon'). It was, in the main, a good show, but it showed clearly the question of
inclusion. Works were included by Al Hansen. Indeed some of Hansen's performance pieces
were, in fact, included in some of the early Fluxus performance festivals. But Hansen did not
get along with Maciunas personally, and so he never belonged to the group as such.
Nevertheless, his pieces in the show matched most of the criteria, and so in this exhibition
they looked fully in place. Surely they were, in fact, Fluxworks. O n the other hand, there were
also some pieces by Mauricio Kagel, Mary Bauermeister and Dieter Rot - all three of them
excellent artists. But their pieces did not match the criteria and they looked rather
incongruous in the Fluxus context.
There are some other non-criteria which are worth mentioning in this discussion. These
are more in the way of Fluxtraditions, by no means criteria, but relevant to a Fluxdiscussion.
Usually Fluxus performances have been done in costume. Either one wears all white, or
one wears a tailcoat, tuxedo or formal evening dress. The former reflects the desire for visual
homogeneity, which Maciunas, as a designer, tended to prize. The latter reflects his fondness
for the deliberately archaic, formal and obsolescent being presented in a new way. O n e sees a
similar current in his use, in his publications, of extremely ornamental type faces, such as
Romantique, for the headings, box covers or titles. These contrast with I B M N e w s Gothic,
the extremely austere type which he used in most of his setting of the body texts in
Fluxpublications. This was the version of the sans-serif N e w s Gothic which was on the I B M
typesetter which he used most of the time in the early days of Fluxus. There is no reason in
particular why either of these traditions should be preserved; they are not integral to Fluxus.
Perhaps it is one of the few areas in Fluxus in which there is room for sentimentality that
both traditions have been carried on in Maciunas' absence.
Another typical involvement in Fluxus which is not, per se, a criterion, is the emphasis on
events that centre around food. M a n y art works and groups of artists have dealt with food,
but in Fluxus it becomes one of the main areas of involvement, perhaps because of its
closeness to the art/life dichotomy. There were not only pieces themselves, using apples,
glasses of water on pianos, beans, salads, messes made of butter and eggs, eggs alone, loaves
of bread and jars of jam or honey, to name just a few that come immediately to mind, but
there were also innumerable Fluxfeasts of various sorts: concerts or events which used the
feast as a matrix. N o doubt these will continue as long as m a n y of the original Fluxpeople are
228 DICK HIGGINS
alive. O n e might speculate that the reason for this is the typical concern with food on the part
of poor or hungry artists. But that seems secondary to the art/life element, and for m e it
demonstrates that for works which are so m u c h on the border of art and life, art and non-art
as Fluxpieces, the convention of a concert is not always suitable. For casual occasions with
small audiences, feasts using food art are the equivalent of chamber-music concerts. Feasts
have included such non-delicacies as totally flavourless gelatine 'Jello', side by side with
delicious loaves of bread in the form of genitals, chocolate bars cast in equally startling
shapes, blue soups and so on. Whether or not such foods are totally satisfying from an
aesthetic point of view is not the question. The point is, rather, that there are non-
determinative but nevertheless typical involvements of Fluxus, side by side with the
determinative criteria.
example, all the elements of a performance behave democratically, none dominates the
others. But this is more to do with the sort of thing that the artist thinks about than anything
a viewer is concerned with.
Nor could they be called 'objective' in the T S Eliot sense. They are not simply objects to
contemplate; they are too minimal for that, and, often, too active as well - they imply too
much. Actually, a few Fluxworks do belong in this vein, but it is not typical.
Neither is the Freudian or symbolic analysis of a Fluxpiece apt to be very rewarding or
extensive. O n e does not have enough materials to work on. Ninety-eight percent of Fluxus
pieces have no symbolic content. Their psychological processes are too far and few between.
Since the artist is not making a statement of any personal or psychological nature, an analysis
of this sort would m a k e very little sense.
A political analysis, Marxist or otherwise, might be interesting, but it would more likely
satisfy the critic than the reader of the criticism, since Fluxus is only metaphorically political.
Since meaning is not the point and the conveyors of the meaning are so incidental that
only a few patterns can be detected, the semiotics of a Fluxpiece are so minimal as to be
problematic or even irrelevant. O f course there are some such conveyors, but these require
only the simplest of identifications. N o patterns of communication would be likely.
The same holds true of structuralist analysis. T h e linguistics of Fluxus would be a mental
exercise, not that Fluxus lacks its overall grammar, but the typical is only sixty per cent of the
corpus, with the rest being exceptions of Some kind or another. The whole analysis, rather
than developing a meaningful critique or picture, would devolve into hairsplitting
distinctions of langue and parole. F e w patterns would be revealed. O n e might analyse a
concert as a whole, but the concert as a work is a fairly arbitrary unit, and each concert tends
to be quite different from other concerts (within certain limits), so that a structuralist analysis
of recurring patterns would be rather pointless.
A n d yet a person w h o attends a Fluxconcert, after thefirstshock, typically gets caught up
in the spirit of it and begins to enjoy it, without consciously knowing why. Perhaps there isn't
even any shock. W h a t is happening? T o get to the answer for this will take a moment.
There is one critical approach that works - hermeneutics, the methodology of
interpretation, both with regard to the artist and to the recipient (the viewer, hearer or
reader). This approach, pioneered in recent times (it has an earlier history too) by Martin
Heidegger, U g o Betti, Hans-Georg G a d a m e r and others in philosophy, can be used to
discover the workings of Fluxpieces fairly well. Usually the relationship between the recipient
and the work is described in terms of a hermeneutic circle - idea of work, leading to
manifestation of work, leading to recipient, leading to recipient's o w n thought processes,
leading to n e w idea of work, leading to further thought processes, leading to modified
perception of work being manifested, leading back to altered perception of the idea of work.
In other words, what the recipient sees is coloured by his or her perception of it - and this is
an implied part of the piece, even though it m a y be quite different from what the artist
thought of it or h o w it was manifested by the performer.
In practice, going through the whole hermeneutic circle is a terribly cumbersome process
to consider. M y o w n preference is to streamline it by borrowing the horizon metaphor from
Gadamer. Taking performance as the standard, for the moment:
230 DICK HIGGINS
The performer performs the work. He or she establishes a horizon of experience - what is done
its implications and whatever style the performer uses are all aspects of this horizon.
The viewer has his or her own horizon of experience. He or she watches the performance, a
horizons are matched up together. To some extent there is a fusion of these horizons
(Horizontverschmelzung). When the horizons fuse, wholly or in part, they are bent, warped,
displaced, altered. The performance ends, and the horizons are no longer actively fused. T
viewer examines his or her horizon. It is changed, for the better or for the worse. The best pi
is the one that permanently affects the recipient's horizon, and the worst is the piece whic
recipient, acting in good faith, cannot accept at all.
The key processes here are: being conscious of the two horizons, completing the fusion
process (by paying close attention to the performance), and then the discovery of the
alterations in one's o w n horizon - as one notices that, for example, the performance has
affected h o w one has been thinking about beans, butter, smiles or eggs. Such criticism focuses
a great deal, of course, on the viewer. It more or less, in performance work, ignores the
original Fluxcomposer, w h o m a y or m a y not be the same as the performer. But this is only
true as far as the viewer is concerned. W h y ?
Because there is a similar fusion of horizons taking place between the composer and the
performer. The composer makes the piece. The performer looks at the performance area and
available materials, and only then decides just h o w to d o the piece under the specific
conditions of the performance. The performer next matches the horizon which he or she has
built up with the horizon of the original piece as he or she sees it. Even if the performer is
performing his o w n work, there will still be something of such a fusion of horizons between
X-as-composer and X-as-performer, because X adapts his or her o w n piece, takes the
responsibility of making slight changes - and, if a piece is performed m a n y years after it was
written, X has changed and the interaction with the piece suggests different significances. The
piece is viewed from m a n y different angles, and different aspects are revealed by each.
N o w w e can see why the viewer can enjoy the concert without knowing w h y - instinctively
he or she is matching horizons, comparing expectations, participating in the process; the
more actively he or she does so, the more likely he or she will be able to enjoy the experience.
Nonetheless, for the viewer, the recipient, the composer is more or less an object of
speculation. O n e wonders w h o Mieko Shiomi might be - does she have green horns? All one
sees is the work that is being done. O n e does not really have any way of knowing if the
performance is staying close to the Fluxcomposer's work or if the performer is taking
liberties with it. W h a t the recipient sees is the performance, no more, no less. But in the case
of works as minimalist as Fluxus ones are apt to be, the more actively the performance is
watched, the more likely one is to enjoy it, as noted above.
A question m a y well start to go through the mind at this point, a natural question in
viewing any unfamiliar art work: 'What is this thing that I a m seeing an example of?' That is
part of discovering one's meaning for a work. W e love to classify. W e involve ourselves in the
naming of things, frame the work in its context, investigate its taxonomy. O f course, while I
a m talking about performance work, any Fluxwork, literary or fine art, would have
analogical processes. But if one goes to a concert of familiar music, this question is
THEORY A N D RECEPTION 231
mitiimalised, because one knows, before one sets a foot in the door, that if Chopin is on the
programme, the concert is likely to include at least some romantic music with a certain kind
of sound to it. Thus the taxonomy is not so important there. O n the other hand, if one turns
on a radio and finds oneself enjoying some u n k n o w n piece, part of the key to enjoying the
piece is to recognise the question - 'What is this an example of?' - and to try to match it with
similar experiences in one's m e m o r y bank, and, so, enjoy the work even more.
The matter of horizons takes place in any hermeneutic art process - it is inherent in the
discovery of the horizons. But in watching a Fluxperformance, examples are all the more
important since they involve discovering the pattern of the performance, the what-is-being-
done. Quite often this discovery, detecting the example aspect of the horizon, comes to the
viewer with a striking impact; it is like 'getting' the point of a joke. And, in fact, the similarity
between even non-humorous Fluxpieces and jokes is striking. Even when the piece is serious,
one tends to react as if the piece were a joke, since a joke is the nearest thing on one's horizon
to many Fluxpieces. For example, one is in an audience watching the stage. A balloon
appears. A second balloon comes along. A third balloon comes along. O n e notices that the
name of the piece is Eight. Suddenly the pattern is clear. O n e laughs. W h y ? There is nothing
inherently funny in the pattern, but it has enough in c o m m o n with jokes so that each balloon,
as it appears and confirms one's anticipation that there will in fact be eight balloons, feels like
a stage along the way. Perhaps the metaphor of 'joke' is implied by the piece. But what would
happen if, in the piece, only seven balloons appeared? O n e would be annoyed, probably feel
cheated. It would seem as if the Fluxcomposer were being overly clever. That would not be
interesting. It would be like a tricky joke that dissolves into excesses of cleverness and amuses
only the teller.
Some assemblages of Fluxpieces have been presented as other things besides concerts and
feasts: rituals have a certain place in Fluxus too. A ritual is, basically, a ceremonial act or
series of such acts, symbolically recognising a transition from one life stage or situation to
another. Three notable Fluxrituals have been a Fluxmass, a Fluxdivorce and the
Fluxwedding of George Maciunas himself. In this last, Maciunas and his bride cross-
dressed, as did the bridesmaids and best m a n (Alison Knowles). The wedding ceremony was
based on a traditional Anglican one, but was altered with deliberate stumblings and
falterings, the substitution of 'Fluxus' for various of the critical words in prayers, and so on.
Instead of anthems and special music, there were various special Fluxpieces which were, in
one way or another, suitable for a wedding. A n d afterwards there was an erotic feast,
including the special bread already mentioned above. According to classical theory one might
expect such a reversal of the normative, with the solemn m a d e light and the religious m a d e
profane, to seem like a satire upon marriages in general. But no, the dominant feeling was
one of joy. It was not a travesty but a incorporation of the horizon of Fluxus into the horizon
of marriage. The result was certainly serious: Maciunas and his bride Billie did, in fact,
actually marry (including a civil service at another time). O n e felt that the participants were
sharing the joy of the basic ceremony with their Fluxfriends - including one fifteen-year-old
girl, a friend of one of m y daughters, w h o came to the Fluxwedding without ever having seen
a Fluxconcert or any other such event before. This young w o m a n , whose horizons were
thoroughly conventional, might have been expected to be shocked or offended - or at least
startled by the erotic feast. But as a whole the situation was so far from the normative that
232 DICK HIGGINS
normative standards did not apply, she did not reject the fusion of horizons but entered into
the situation and enjoyed herself thoroughly as one might at any other kind of wedding.
Ultimately, of course, the purpose of achieving such a fusion of horizons is to allow for
the possibility of their alteration. I have not gone into Fluxobjects, Fluxboxes and
Fluxbooks, but the situation is the same as with the performances - one sees the work,
considers its implied horizons, matches them with one's own, and these last, if the work
works well, are altered and enriched. O n e sees, for example, the word 'green' in wooden
letters on a wooden tablet. The tablet and word are painted green. O n e thinks about labels,
green and life, craft and its absence, simplicity and complexity. Or perhaps the tablet and
word are painted red, though the word still says 'green'. In this case there is a displacement.
The word says something different from what one would expect. O r perhaps there is a whole
rainbow of 'green' tablets, from red to violet and brown, perhaps even including black and
white. A n y of such pieces would work reasonably well - the horizons would work, and the
implications, while different, would follow somewhat along the same pattern: see, identify
what it is, compare it with what it might be, consider, digest, anticipate the next possibility,
observe the transformation of one's o w n horizons - and enjoy the process. Each of these
pieces is an example of the possibilities. W h e n one sees such a piece, one imagines its
alternatives. The alternatives are implied in the piece. The work is, in this sense, exemplative:
it does not exist, as most art does, in the most definitive and perfect form possible. It exists in
a form which suggests alternatives. This is true of m a n y recent works, not just Fluxworks but
other works as well. They encourage the creativity of the viewer, listener or reader; that is, of
the receiver.
Such implications are a key criterion for evaluating the quality of a Fluxwork. If it has
them, if one is conscious of them on the intuitive and imaginative level (rather than forcing
them through an act of will), the work is good. That is, it is achieving its potential. The extent
to which it lacks implications, conversely, is the extent to which it is not good, to the extent
that it fails. O n e can, for metaphysical reasons, reject such value judgements on the conscious
level, of course; but one experiences them nonetheless, and performs an act of criticism and,
hopefully, of self-enrichment when one allows one's horizons to be changed.
The best Fluxworks imply a whole set of other possible Fluxworks. In terms of
performance style (or style of execution as Fluxart, Fluxboxes and Fluxbooks), the best
performances are therefore those which are most direct, so that one can perceive at least some
of the alternative possibilities to the form in which a given work appears. This avoids what
would be a problem in these works of becoming involved with noticing craftsmanship and the
definitiveness of the statement in a work.
The best performance style is, therefore, that which allows the piece to be experienced
with a m i n i m u m of consciousness of the performer interceding between piece and receiver.
This is also true of some kinds of non-Fluxus performances - of comedy, for instance. A
Charlie Chaplin presents the humour in his films in an altogether deadpan way, while a
twelfth-rate jokester in a hotel bar does m u c h of the laughing and expressing himself- and
bores the audience. In such cases the horizons of 'joke' and 'audience anticipation' fail to
fuse. So it is with Fluxus too. The proper style for Fluxus is the most low-key and efficient
one. O n e does not mystify the audience - that is not the point - but one lets it have exactly
enough information to discover the horizon, and then one lets the piece do the rest. It is never
T H E O R Y A N D R E C E P T I O N 233
necessary to joke about the Fluxpiece or to comment about it in an evaluative way, 'Next we
will have a great piece from 1963 by Ben Vautier ...' That would constitute an intrusion, and,
far from making the piece more likeable, would detract from it.
One digression is necessary here before we leave the matter of theory and horizons; this is
the matter of large works. The impression exists that all Fluxworks are small or minimalist.
This is obviously not the case with what I have called the collation sort of Fluxus assemblage.
Some patterns simply cannot be absorbed in their minimalist statement; they require time to
reveal themselves effectively. The pieces are, necessarily, harder to understand for an
audience; the past experience of the members of the audience usually has led them to expect
more entertainment values than they are likely to get. One hears it said, T liked the little
pieces, but the big ones went on too long'. What one hopes is that the boredom, if any, will be
temporary, while the receiver fights the horizon of the piece. Boredom is, of course, not the
aim of the piece; but it may be a necessary way-station on the path to liking it. Therefore,
with such pieces the characteristic length is apt to have to be sufficiently long to allow the
receiver to get through the boring phase and into the spirit of the event afterwards. This is
why Fluxus pieces are apt either to be very short - two minutes or less - or very long - twenty
minutes or more. There are rather few in the middle-length category.
There is a slight difference between European Fluxus and American Fluxus. The
Europeans have tended to perform their Fluxus works in the context of festivals, while the
Americans have tended to let the life situations predominate more often. Almost all the
Fluxperformances in Europe have been in such concert situations, except for a few in the
street; in America both of these have happened, but the feasts and the Fluxrituals have
virtually all happened in America. The reason for this is not a difference in attitude, but is,
rather, that the European Fluxartists are more scattered and it takes a well-financed festival
to bring them together. O n the other hand, in spite of the worsefinancialsituation in
America, there are more Fluxartists there, and they form one or several communities. For
instance, in N e w York City alone there are perhaps forty Fluxpeople in residence and so to
bring them together is not hard.
Also, the European Fluxworks, more typically than the American ones, come out of an
expressive tradition. Since, to build up an emotional impact, one usually needs to work on a
scale that is beyond the minimal, the collation sort of work is more typically European; while
the minimal one is more typically American or Japanese. Besides, even if an American
wanted to work on the larger scale, funding and obtaining rehearsal time would be
problematic, so the economics militate against doing such pieces in America vis-a-vis Europe.
performances that he brought his family and friends to the concerts as well. Furthermore,
some of the more successful Fluxperformances have been done in the street or on boardwalks
and in other public spaces. O n e performance by Benjamin Patterson comes to mind It took
place in N e w York's Times Square, on the edge of a red-light district. H e stood on street
corners, waiting until the lights turned green, and then simply followed the light to the next
corner. Several young w o m e n - they appeared to be prostitutes - watched him do this for a
while, and then they joined in. This situation was not as exceptional as one might imagine.
Thus it cannot be argued that simply because it is formally unconventional, Fluxus is lacking
in potential popularity. Because of the comparative simplicity of most Fluxus pieces, this is
less true of Fluxus than of other avant-garde tendencies.
For most avant-garde art, one needs to k n o w quite a considerable amount of art history
and even of technical procedure in order to get one's bearings enough to be able to fuse one's
horizons and experience pleasure. The difficulty of doing this is apt to become more
pronounced, in fact, with the progressive intellectualism of the audience, since it has more
expectations of what will or should happen. A n audience with the baggage of ideas to which
it feels some commitment has more to overcome than an audience without them. A n d it must
overcome the false horizons in order to be able to fuse them and experience pleasure. A n
audience with a strong commitment to one or another alternative set of ideas - intellectual or
derived from precedent and fashion - has to learn that these ideas are not under attack in
Fluxus situations, that they are simply irrelevant to the work at hand; and this takes time.
A s I have said, Fluxus performances and situations are popular with the public once the
public is confronted by them. M a n y times 'professionals' in charge of the programmes of
institutions have grossly underestimated the appeal of Fluxpieces; they devote an evening to
Fluxperformances when they might have devoted several, and then they are surprised at the
frustration a m o n g those w h o have to be turned away. They programme an exhibition, print
500 catalogues, and find that the exhibition breaks attendance records and that they must
print another thousand or so catalogues. The public is, therefore, not the problem.
A s for artists, few artists w h o do performance works can attend a Flux performance
without, subsequently, including Fluxus-type elements in their o w n next performance.
Naturally, these are usually not acknowledged, but a sensitive viewer can detect them. For
example, in the 1960s, the famous Living Theatre picked up fragments of Fluxworks,
especially from Jackson M a c L o w and myself (we had both worked with the Living Theatre
at various points) and included them in their programme, 'Shorter Pieces'.
Another example of the absorption of Fluxus happened during the 1970s, when
'performance art' or 'art performances' became c o m m o n . Typically performance art was
different from Fluxus, in that it included m u c h more narrative and subjectively personal
content, usually focussing on generating a public persona for the artist. W o r k s by Laurie
Anderson are a good example of this, stressing the bright young ingenue in the high-tech
world of N e w York City (not always justifiable, but usually fairly convincing in
performance). The persona m a y be quite different from the private personality of the artist.
However, the minimalist structure within which the performance takes place, the
untraditional narrative matrix, the absence of most theatrical techniques, suggest a debt to
Fluxus (and perhaps to Happenings). The performances of 'performance artists' match many
of the Fluxus criteria given above, and, but for their knowledge of Fluxus, it is unlikely that
T H E O R Y A N D RECEPTION 235
their work would assume the form it did without some awareness of it. Since the artists w h o
did this work were, for the most part, younger than the Fluxus people, they naturally did not
wish to present themselves as travelling in the wake of Fluxus or Happenings. They describe
themselves as qualitatively new and different, although there are at least three overlaps,
artists who have done major Fluxwork but w h o are accepted as performance artists as well -
Alison Knowles (one of the original Fluxpeople), Geoffrey Hendricks, and Jean Dupuy. This
legacy area can and should be explored more fully at some point.
But there are two bodies of people whose hostility towards Fluxus is profound Maciunas
thought this hostility was irreversible, and perhaps he was right. These are both groups of art
professionals: those w h o work in art institutions (galleries and museums) and the artists w h o
are 'good' in whatever it is that they do, but w h o are not good enough to be really secure in it.
Of this last group, it is a truism that 'the good is ever the enemy to the best'. This means that,
by their very nature, artists w h o are not really strong enough to create new territory must rely
for their professional success on the continued attention (and therefore value) assigned to the
safe ground that they are on. Such artists felt very threatened by Fluxus, which, as they see it,
calls into question the validity of what they are doing by posing an alternative model. In fact,
one might almost say that one way to tell the difference between a good pattern painter and a
fine one, between a good photo-realist painter and a fine one, would be to ask them about
Fluxus. The strong one will either be supportive or not interested; the weak one will attack it.
Why? Because Fluxus is concerned with works and ideas, with a minimum of personality. It
is done for the love of it - 'for its o w n sake', in Victor Cousin's phrase of 1816. If value comes
to be attached to this - great! But it is uncommercial by its very nature. It does not take a
great expert to m a k e coffee as a performance. But commercial is exactly what most second-
rate professional art is - it demands to be admired so that it can be sold. There is, thus, a real
threat in this sense to this kind of professionalism on the part of Fluxworks, and the good
artist who is not one of the best recognises this on the gut level intuitively.
Museum and gallery people have a somewhat similar problem with Fluxus. Fluxusworks
do not lend themselves easily to becoming commodities - precious objects sold through
stores, as art galleries want them to be, or beautiful fetishes to immortalise the donor of
works in the local museum. But a Fluxobject is valuable not intrinsically because of the ideas
which it implies and embodies. It has more the quality of a souvenir or sacred relic than of an
exquisitely wrought product offinecraftsmanship. There are only a few Fluxworks (again,
Vostell is perhaps an exception) which could not be duplicated by the artist, more or less
exactly, without any great effort. In fact, if a Fluxobject is damaged - for example by a
packer at a m u s e u m after an exhibition, w h o might well dismantle it without knowing what
he is doing - it is often easier to remake it than to repair it. This can be exasperating to the
gallery or museum person. The collector bought the object and it was damaged; normally, if
it were traditional art, he would arrange for the artist to restore it, or would hire a skilled
restorer to do so. O n the other hand, some Fluxartists feel that when the work has passed out
of their possession, it is the responsibility of the new owner to restore it or possibly even to
remake it. The idea of the work is part of the work here, and the idea has been transferred
along with the ownership of the object that embodies it. This is discouraging to collectors,
and is therefore discouraging to those w h o service them as well. Normally when one goes to a
great collection one is conscious of the display of wealth; one speculates on h o w m u c h this or
236 DICK HIGGINS
that work or the entire collection must have cost. Such collections belong not only to the
world of art, of course, but to the world of taste and fashion. O n e can try to ignore this
feeling or inquiry, but one will seldom succeed. But a collection of Fluxus works will
inevitably include some pieces which are untransformed from life (Duchamp's urinal could
have been a Fluxwork). Their significance is their ability to transform the viewer's horizons;
this stress threatens the assumptions of those w h o are commodity or craft-orientated.
Gallery operators service such collections, of course. They therefore have a vested
interest in discouraging their opposites. M u s e u m s service such collections too. Both,
therefore, tend to disparage Fluxus - they say 'it's over'. They have been saying this since
Fluxus began. Since Fluxus is as m u c h a form and an attitude as it is a historical tendency,
even if the tendency were over the form might not be over. Is collage 'over'? O r they say 'it's
all paper, meaning that there are no substantial works, which is untrue. It is the
responsibility of Fluxartists, in order to bring their ideas to the people, to prove otherwise,
and to endure until the larger museums, however reluctantly, feel they must give more than
token attention to Fluxus, even though most of the skill in Fluxworks goes into the
conception rather than the execution.
Fluxus differs from most art in being more purely conceptual. It is not just a group of
people or a historic tendency so m u c h as a class of form, with the nine characteristics which I
have already mentioned. The best ingress into the work, since it does not usually offer the
same experience or have to match our normative expectation for art, is via herrneneuties, via
the horizon concept. Historically Fluxus has had an influence on art performance - also on
artists' books (bookworks), which I have not discussed. But its real impact will probably be
when new artists can take up the Fluxus format without being self-conscious about it; to
m a k e what they themselves need from the area. T o appreciate this a special kind of gallery
director or m u s e u m person would be needed, since it would be, at best, problematic for a
traditional one to deal with Fluxus.
NOTE
1 This essay was written in Berlin, Germany, in March 1982 and revised in April 1985. It
was published in the Fluxus Research issue of Lund Art Press in 1991. A recently revised
version appears in Dick Higgins' new book, Modernism since Postmodernism, San Diego
State University Press, 1997.
KEN FRIEDMAN:
FLUXUS AND COMPANY1
FLUXUS 1962
Ideas, Issues and Paradigms
The idea of Fluxus was born long before 1962. W e see it in the philosophy of Heraclitus and
we see in the idea that you cannot cross the same river twice. W efindit in fourteenth-century
Zen texts and w e find it in the paradigms of science that began taking shape in the late 1800s.
Rene Block coined the term 'Fluxism' to refer to an idea. The Fluxus idea transcends a
specific group of people, and the idea has been visible through history. While the Fluxus idea
existed long before the specific group of people called Fluxus, the group gave Fluxism a
tangible shape through the work of experimental artists, architects, composers and designers
who created, published, exhibited and performed under the Fluxus label. The idea grew into
a community larger than the group, a larger community that includes people whose ideas and
work incorporate elements based on the Fluxus experiment. It also includes a community of
individuals w h o themselves became important to the Fluxus group.
Fluxus evolved around a conscious use of model-making and paradigm formation. M y
purpose here is to discuss Fluxus and to analyse some of the models and paradigms that seem
to m e essential in understanding it.
There have been m a n y parallels between Fluxus and science. N e w models in mathematics
often precede and lead to new applications in physical science. So, too, paradigms in art
emerge when the worldview is shifting. Shifts in vision transform culture and science as they
reshape history. These shifts are visible in the shifting paradigms of art.
While new paradigms engender new technology as well as new art, relatively few
technologies have given birth to interesting art forms. Buckminster Fuller noted a three-
decade time lag between innovative paradigms and their wide adoption. M a n y of the new
disciplines have only n o w been around for thirty years. S o m e aren't yet a decade old. As a
result, the time m a y not yet be ripe for their obvious application in visual art.
Electronic processors and video equipment did give rise to new art forms. They were
obvious technologies that artists could exploit. More significant, the paradigms on which
they operate are not new. Electronic music, for example, began with electrical equipment
rather than the electronic equipment that is available today. Electronic music was called
'electronic music' because the term seemed more workable than 'electric music' or 'electrical
music' would have been. The first electronic music was created with wired circuits and
electrical tubes, not with transistors and computers. The most interesting early equipment for
electronic music was closer to an old-fashioned telephone switchboard in appearance and
operation than it was to today's modern desk-top computers. The equipment available to
artists and composers in those days was analogue equipment, wired and arranged by hand, a
far cry from the powerful work stations that n o w contain more computing power than even
the biggest mainframes once had.
The past and present of electronic music offer merely one example. The technological
applications of electronic art are still primitive, even if the paradigms are not, and it seems to
m e that video and the electronic arts are still in their primitive stage. In a way, video has just
passed out of its Stone Age and into the Bronze Age.
Video is n o w a recognised art form, as electronic music, electrostatic printing, electrostatic
transfer and electrostatic printmaking have become. The media are n o w distinct and simple
but the artistic results are not often powerful or elegant. T o o many artists are entranced with
the physical qualities of the medium they use and unconscious about the ideas that they
attempt to develop. Art is burdened by attention to physical media and plagued by a failure
to consider the potential of intermedia.
The equipment available to artists today does far more physically than is really
necessary. W e see too many videos that are long on technique and short on content.
Computerised graphic design often illustrates the problem. Graphic designers explore the
capacity of a computer to set hundreds of complex graphic objects on a page with multiple
layers and hitherto impossible effects while they remain unaware of such matters as
legibility and basic communication theory. The technical power available to computer-
based designers outstrips their design ability in m a n y cases. The result has been an
avalanche of complicated, trendy typography and fussy, mannerist design created to look
up-to-date rather than to communicate. The most powerful use of the computer in science
is to create elegant, simple solutions to complex problems. W h e n artists use the mechanical
power of the computer to complicate rather than to simplify, it suggests that they do not
understand the paradigms of the new technology. They have merely learned to manipulate
the equipment.
The art forms that will one day emerge from computation science and chaos studies have
not yet reached the level of video and electronic music, as basic as they still are. The physical
forms of computation science or chaos are not as simple or as obvious as electronic music or
video. At present the technology dictates the medium and technological frenzy sometimes
FLUXUS A N D COMPANY 239
inhibits the learning process. It m a y also be that evolution demands the creation of m a n y
dead-ends on the w a y to interesting art.
The computer-generated images presented today as computer art or the fractal images of
chaos studies are simplistic presentations of an idea. They are laboratory exercises or displays
of technical virtuosity, designed to test and demonstrate the media and the technology. They
are the intellectual and artistic equivalent of the paint samples that interior designers use to
plan out larger projects. They m a y be interesting and useful in some way, but only people
shopping for paint find them relevant.
By contrast, Fluxus suggests approaches that are simple rather than simplistic. The level
of complexity in any given work is determined by philosophical paradigms. It isn't dictated
by available technology. This is an important difference in a technological age. It
distinguishes Fluxus forms as humanistic forms - forms determined by the artist rather
than by the tools. The idea of simplicity owes as m u c h to the Fluxus refusal to distinguish
between art and life as to the intellectual curiosity that characterises Fluxus artists.
paradigms for the consideration of art, architecture, music and design. The artists,
composers, architects and designers w h o constituted the Fluxus community worked with
simple ideas - ideas so simple that they were easy to ignore. A s often happens in developing
paradigms, simplicity is a focus for concentrated thinking. It generates depth, power and
resonance. That is h o w Fluxus survived and w h y Fluxus was never just an art movement.
The environment also changes. Just as the telefax redefined the way that people
communicate, new media will once again transform our way of sending and receiving
messages. Telefax was developed before the widespread availability of the personal computer.
Today, personal computers and the various ways of linking them are beginning to replace
telefax - including computers that emulate a telefax. In a sense, the telefax that once seemed
so revolutionary is beginning to appear as an entry-level technology. The Pony Express once
redefined the world's understanding of message delivery speed, but it lasted only two years
before it was replaced by the telegraph. The telegraph was later replaced by the telephone, an
invention that was once thought of as a special kind of toy for transmitting musical concerts
and news broadcasts.
Today, satellite-linked telephones, computer networks and e-mail are shaping a platform
that will slowly encompass the Earth. This platform will eventually m a k e videophone
possible through a new technology unimagined by the original inventors of the videophone
concept. Despite the growth of advanced technology, the relatively simple telefax remains
useful and so do land-line telephones. Today, as in past times, there are situations in which
older technologies are better suited to modern applications than the more advanced
solutions. O n e example is the suitability of entry-level mobile phone systems for developing
nations that use a more simple and less expensive technology than the G S M systems that are
n o w standard in m a n y European nations.
S o m e technologies and paradigms will probably never lose their value. Books are an
example for reading. The h u m a n voice is an example for speaking and singing. These are
examples of simple paradigms and technologies that are accessible and available under such a
wide variety of options that they will always be useful for some applications. I like to think of
Fluxus that way - as a useful series of paradigms and options.
at great disadvantage, primarily because they cut themselves off from the competition and
evolution of a changing worldwide environment.
This was a far different situation than the situation of the nations and empires of India,
Korea and Vietnam, all of which found themselves in problematic situations dictated more
by historical circumstances than troubles brought about by specific and bad decisions. For
any number of reasons, however, the empires of Asia, old, wealthy and powerful, were
unable to innovate and compete effectively against the vigorous and often ruthless expansion
of the Western powers. The Asian powers had their o w n ruthless dynasties. The triumph of
the West did not occur because the West was willing to be immoral where the East was
spiritual and unprepared to resist. The main issues were technological and economic: the
West had a more effective technology than the East had, a technology that was coupled to a
culture more able to innovate and initiate change. That m o m e n t essentially dictated the shape
of world power and the global economic system for roughly five centuries. Those five
centuries are n o w coming to an end
A new era is taking shape now. W e do not yet have a n a m e for the new era, but it is clear
that a new time is emerging. Asia is once again a wealthy, powerful region, expanding and
transforming the world economy. Ledfirstby Japan, and later by Korea and Taiwan, with
mainland China about to emerge and India following after, Asia will soon be the world's
largest regional economy. The Asia-Pacific region already equals Europe and the United
States in wealth. It m a y soon equal them in power and geopolitical influence. There is every
reason to believe that the Asia-Pacific region (possibly including Australia and North
America) will play the kind of role in the twenty-first century that Europe played from the
seventeenth to thefirsthalf of the twentieth century and that America played from the early
twentieth century on. The consequences of this transformation will be good and bad. The
degree to which the transformation will work good or bad results on individuals and societies
will depend on w h o they are, on where they are and on their viewpoint. Whether the changes
are good or bad, however, the m o m e n t in which the new era takes shape will be a time-based
boundary state.
Boundary states in ecological systems give rise to interesting life forms. Transition times in
history give rise to interesting culture forms.
Thefirstsigns of this global transformation began in the last century. The old era could be
said to have ended in 1815 with the Treaty of Vienna that closed the Napoleonic Wars. That
was the last real m o m e n t of the old Europe, the old diplomacy, the old empires. The putative
revolutions of the mid-century, the revolutions that failed, were the beginning of the new
nationalism, a clear sign that the European empires were doomed. Even though they didn't
know it yet, the Hapsburgs were in trouble, as were the Romanovs, the Saxe-Coburg-Gotha
Windsors-to-be and the Hohenzollerns of Prussia, whose imperial aspirations were
essentially doomed even before their empire was cobbled together by the Iron Chancellor.
The final result of the twentieth century could not have been predicted at that time but
change was on the horizon. Technology, economy and history doomed the static and slow-
moving empires with all their cultural baggage.
The transformative zone in the cultural ecology that ushered in our century became visible
in the 1890s with the work of writers, artists and composers such as Alfred Jarry, Pablo
Picasso, Douanier Rousseau and Erik Satie. The tradition they established became a kind of
242 KEN FRIEDMAN
left-handed, Tantric approach to art, contrarian and often hermetic. It was a transnational
art in an era that would become increasingly national under the influence of the national
movements in art and music that accompanied the break-up of the empires and the liberation
of conquered and colonised nations.
As a result, this tradition in art excited and stimulated young artists, opened the doors to
many cultures and at the same time inevitably came into conflict with the very cultures they
enlivened. Only the m o m e n t of international modernism m a d e Hollywood possible, for
example, and yet Hollywood movies grew and blossomed as a typically American art form -
a cultural innovation as boldly ethnocentric as the music of Grieg and Sibelius, as peculiarly
archetypal in their national expression as the paintings of Matisse or Gaudi's architecture.
The end result was that this century saw two arts and two cultures growing side by side. One
was public, heroic and national in inclination. The other was intellectual, hermetic and global
in tone.
These two traditions challenged and informed each other, yet for a host of reasons, they
remained separate; separated as m u c h by the demands of politics and economics as by the
reality of art. Take the case of Abstract Expressionism, for example. This was thefirstart
movement to exert worldwide influence after America took on the international leadership
that the disintegrated European empires and their impoverished heirs could no longer afford.
Europe and Asia informed the best sentiments of Abstract Expressionism. It was an art
that would have been impossible without the twin influences of Surrealism and oriental
culture on America. W h e n it came time for America to stand for its o w n in the international
art world, however, politics, economics and political economics dictated that Abstract
Expressionism be treated as some kind of uniquely American triumph. Viewed in one way,
this was the voice of a young nation come into its own. Viewed another way, this was history
chasing its o w n tail. The triumph of American painting was heralded by myopic art critics.
Some of them were well informed in the narrow terms of art history, but they were
conveniently ignorant of larger cultural history. Most of them managed to overlook the fact
that the art market and art history are generally - and only temporarily - dominated by the
nation that currently holds the balance of power in the geopolitical and economic terms. This
view served the political purposes of the American government. There was no purpose to be
served by making clear just h o w impossible this artistic achievement would have been
without the defeated Japan, the problematic China, or an occasionally fractious Europe that
America was attempting to dominate and lead. Thus the acolytes of Abstract Expressionism
ballyhooed the grandeur of the N e w York painters, treating everything up to that moment as
the prelude to their triumph. One cannot entirely blame America for this attitude. After all,
the Greeks, the Italians, the Dutch, the British and the Japanese, not to mention the French,
had done so themselves, on behalf of their several republics and empires.
It is the other tradition that influenced Fluxus, a tradition that has inevitably been
neglected because it is anti-nationalistic in sentiment and tone and practised by artists who
are not easily used as nationalflag-bearers.Individual artists such as Marcel D u c h a m p and
John Cage are accurately seen as ancestors of Fluxus, but ideas played a larger role than
individuals. Russian revolutionary art groups such as L E F were an influence on some. For
others. D e Stijl and the Bauhaus philosophy were central. The idea that one can be an artist
and - at the same time - an industrialist, an architect or a designer is a key to the way one can
FLUXUS AND COMPANY 243
view Fluxus work and the artist's role in society. It is as important to work in the factory or
the urban landscape as in the museum. It is important to be able to shift positions and to
work in both environments.
Dada was further from Fluxus in m a n y ways than either D e Stijl or Bauhaus. The seeming
relationship between Fluxus and D a d a is more a matter of appearances than of deep
structure. Robert Filliou pointed this out in his 1962 statement making clear that Fluxus is
not Dadaist in its intentions. D a d a was explosive, irreverent and m a d e m u c h use of humour,
as Fluxus has also done. But D a d a was nihilistic, a millenarian movement in modernist
terms. Fluxus was constructive. Fluxus was founded on principles of creation, of
transformation and its central method sought new ways to build.
Jean Sellem asserts that the Fluxus tradition is, indeed, a tradition rooted in hermetic
philosophy and even in the hidden traditions of such movements as Kabbalah and Tantra. I
cannot quite agree with him, yet I think he brings up a point that offers valid ways to
understand Fluxus. So, too, this assertion works well with some of the ways in which Fluxus
works. Fluxus aspires to serve everyone, but it demands a certain kind of perspective and
commitment. Anyone can have it, but everyone must work to get it. The premises and the
results are simple; the path from the premises to the goal can be difficult.
One way or another, though, Fluxus is a creature of the fluid moment. The transformative
zone where the shore meets the water is simple, and complex, too. The entire essence of chaos
theory and the new sciences of complexity suggest that profoundly simple premises can create
rich, complex interaction and lead to surprising results. Finding the simple elements that
interact to shape our complex environment is the goal of m u c h science. In culture, too, and in
human behaviour, simple elements combine in m a n y ways. O n the one hand, w e seek to
understand and describe them. O n the other, w e seek to use them. The fascination and delight
of transformation states in boundary zones is the way in which they evolve naturally.
York Audio-Visual Group, for example, had been active since 1956. In Germany, a similar
group of artists and composers had been working together equally as long. Maciunas'
projects offered these people a forum. For many of them, Fluxus was a forum and a meeting
place without ideological or artistic conditions and without a defined artistic programme.
After Wiesbaden, artists w h o had been working on similar principles came into contact
with others w h o were active in the Fluxus community. Some of them became active in the
Fluxus group. Most of them were working on a similar basis and they took part in Fluxus
because of what they had already done. These artists were to include Eric Andersen, Joseph
Beuys, Giuseppe Chiari, Henning Christiansen, Philip Corner, Robert Filliou, Bengt af
Klintberg, Y o k o Ono, Willem de Ridder, Takako Saito, T o m a s Schmit, Daniel Spoerri,
Robert Watts, La Monte Young and others. Some, like La Monte, had been in touch with
George long before Wiesbaden. The group kept growing through the mid-1960s, eventually
coming to include other artists such as Milan Knizak, Geoff Hendricks, Larry Miller, Yoshi
Wada, Jean Dupuy and myself.
There were thus two groups of original Fluxus members. Thefirstgroup was comprised of
the nine who were at Wiesbaden. The second group included those w h o came into Fluxus in
the years after, distinguished by innovative work that led the others to welcome them.
Fluxus has been able to grow because it has had room for dialogue and transformation. It
has been able to be born and reborn several times in different ways. The fluid understanding
of its own history and meaning; the central insistence on dialogue and social creativity rather
than on objects and artefacts have enabled Fluxus to remain alive on the several occasions
that Fluxus has been declared dead.
Globalism
Globalism is central to Fluxus. It embraces the idea that we live on a single world, a world in
which the boundaries of political states are not identical with the boundaries of nature or
culture. Dick Higgins' list used the term 'internationalism'. Higgins referred to Fluxus'
complete lack of interest in the national origin of ideas or of people, but internationalism can
FLUXUS A N D C O M P A N Y 245
their wealth and power will be preserved. This is quite contrary to an open or entrepreneurial
society in which the opportunity to advance is based on the ability to create value in the form
of goods or services.
The basic tendency of elitist societies to restrict opportunity is w h y elite societies
eventually strangle themselves. H u m a n beings are born with the genetic potential for talent
and the potential to create value for society without regard to gender, race, religion or other
factors. While some social groups intensify or weaken certain genetic possibilities through
preferential selection based on social factors, the general tendency is that any h u m a n being
can in theory represent any potential contribution to the whole. A society that restricts access
to education or to the ability to shape value makes it impossible for the restricted group to
contribute to the larger society. This means that a restrictive society willfinallycripple itself
in comparison to or in competition with a society in which anyone can provide service to
others to the greatest extent possible.
For example, a society which permits all of its members to develop and use their talents to
the fullest extent will always be a richer and more competitive society than a society which
denies some members education because of race, religion or social background Modern
societies produce value through professions based on education. Educated people create the
material wealth that enable all members of a society to flourish through such disciplines as
physics, chemistry or engineering. It is nearly impossible to become a physicist, a chemist or
an engineer without an education. Those societies that m a k e it impossible for a large section
of the population to be educated for these professions must statistically reduce their chances
of innovative material progress in comparison with those societies that educate every person
with the aptitude for physics, chemistry or engineering.
Fluxus, however, proposes a world in which it is possible to create the greatest value for
the greatest number of people. This finds its parallel in m a n y of the central tenets of
Buddhism. In economic terms, it leads to what could be called Buddhist capitalism or green
capitalism. In the arts, the result can be confusing. The arts are a breeding ground and a
context for experiment. The world uses art to conduct experiments of m a n y kinds - thought
experiments and sense experiments. At their best, the arts are a cultural wetlands, a breeding
ground for evolution and for the transmutation of life forms. In a biologically rich dynamic
system, there are m a n y more opportunities for evolutionary dead-ends than for successful
mutation. A s a result, there must be and there is greater latitude for mistakes and
transgressions in the world of the arts than in the immediate and results-oriented world of
business or social policy. This raises the odd possibility that a healthy art world m a y be a
world in which there is always more bad art than good. According to some, the concept of
bad art or good is misleading: this was Filliou's assertion, the point he m a d e with his series of
bien fait, ma I fait works.
Ultimately, the development and availability of a multiplicity of works and views
permits choice, progress and development. This is impossible in a centrally planned,
controlled society. The democratic context of competing visions and open information
makes this growth possible. Access to information is a basis for this development, which
means that everyone must have the opportunity to shape information and to use it. Just as
short-term benefits can accrue in entropic situations, so it is possible for individuals and
nations to benefit from the short-term monopoly of resources and opportunities. Thus the
FLUXUS A N D COMPANY 247
urge for elitism based on social class and for advantage based on nationalism. In the long
run, this leads to problems that disadvantage everyone. Fluxism suggests globalism,
democracy and anti-elitism as intelligent premises for art, for culture and for long-term
human survival.
Paik's great 1962 manifesto, Utopian Laser Television, pointed in this direction. H e
proposed a new communications m e d i u m based on hundreds of television channels. Each
channel would 'narrowcast' its o w n programme to an audience of those w h o wanted the
programme without regard to the size of the audience. It would m a k e no difference whether
the audience was m a d e of two viewers or two billion. It wouldn't even matter whether the
programmes were intelligent or ridiculous, commonly comprehensible or perfectly eccentric.
The medium would m a k e it possible for all information to be transmitted, and each m e m b e r
of each audience would be free to select or choose his o w n programming based on a m e n u of
infinitely large possibilities.
Even though Paik wrote his manifesto for television rather than computer-based
information, he predicted the worldwide computer network and its effects. A s technology
advances to the point were computer power will m a k e it possible for the computer network to
carry and deliver full audiovisual programming such as movies or videotapes, w e will be able
to see Paik's Utopian Laser Television. That is the ultimate point of the Internet with its
promise of an information-rich world.
As Buckminster Fuller suggested, it must eventually m a k e sense for all h u m a n beings to
have access to the multiplexed distribution of resources in an environment of shared benefits,
common concern and mutual conservation of resources.
Intermedia
Intermedia is the appropriate vehicleforFluxism. Dick Higgins introduced the term 'inter-
media' to the modern world in his famous 1966 essay. H e described an art form appropriate
to people w h o say there are n o boundaries between art and life. If there cannot be a
boundary between art and life, there cannot be boundaries between art forms and art forms.
For purposes of history, of discussion, of distinction, one can refer to separate art forms, but
the meaning of intermedia is that our time often calls for art forms that draw on the roots of
several media, growing into new hybrids.
Imagine, perhaps, an art form that is comprised 1 0 % of music, 2 5 % of architecture, 1 2 %
of drawing, 1 8 % of shoemaking, 3 0 % of painting and 5 % of smell. W h a t would it be like?
248 KEN FRIEDMAN
H o w would it work? H o w would some of the specific art works appear? H o w would they
function? H o w would the elements interact? This is a thought experiment that yields
interesting results. Thoughts like this have given rise to some of the most interesting art
works of our time.
Experimentalism
Fluxus applied the scientific method to art. Experimentalism, research orientation and
iconoclasm were its hallmarks. Experimentalism doesn't merely mean trying new things. It
means trying new things and assessing the results. Experiments that yield useful results cease
being experiments and become usable tools, like penicillin in medicine or imaginary numbers
in mathematics.
The research orientation applies not only to the experimental method, but to the ways in
which research is conducted. Most artists, even those w h o believe themselves experimen-
talists, understand very little about the ways ideas develop. In science, the notion of
collaboration, of theoreticians, experimenters and researchers working together to build new
methods and results, is well established. Fluxus applied this idea to art. M a n y Fluxus works
are the result of numbers of artists active in dialogue. Fluxus artists are not thefirstto apply
this method, but Fluxus is thefirstart movement to declare this way of working as an entirely
appropriate method for use over years of activity rather than as the occasional diversion.
M a n y Fluxworks are still created by single artists, but from thefirstto the present day, you
find Fluxus artists working together on projects where more than one talent can be brought
to bear.
Iconoclasm is almost self-evident. W h e n you work in an experimental way in afieldas
bounded by restrictions and prejudices as art, you have got to be willing to break the rules of
cultural tradition.
Chance
One key aspect of Fluxus experimentation is chance. The methods - and results - of chance
occur over and over again in the work of Fluxus artists. There are several ways of
approaching chance. Chance, in the sense of aleatoric or random chance, is a tradition with a
legacy going back to D u c h a m p , to D a d a and to Cage. M u c h has been m a d e of this tradition
in writings about Fluxus, perhaps more than is justified, but this is understandable in the
cultural context in which Fluxus appeared. By the late 1950s the world seemed to have
become too routinised, and opportunities for individual engagement in the great game of life
too limited. In America, this phenomenon was noted in books such as The Organisation Man,
in critiques of 'the silent generation', and in studies such as The Lonely Crowd. The entire
artistic and political programme of the beatniks was built on opposition to routine. Random
chance, a way to break the bonds, took on a powerful attraction, and for those w h o grew up
in the late 1950s and early 1960s, it still has the nostalgic aroma that hot rods and James
Dean movies hold for others. Even so, random chance was more useful as a technique than as
a philosophy.
There is also evolutionary chance. In the long run, evolutionary chance plays a more
powerful role in innovation than random chance. Evolutionary chance engages a certain
element of the random. Genetic changes occur, for example, in a process that is known as
FLUXUS A N D COMPANY 249
random selection. N e w biological mutations occur at random under the influence of limited
entropy - for example, when radiation affects the genetic structure. This is a technical
degeneration of the genetic code, but some genetic deformations actually offer good options
for survival and growth. W h e n one of thesefindsan appropriate balance between the change
and the niche in which it finds itself, it does survive to become embodied in evolutionary
development.
This has parallels in art and in music, in h u m a n cultures and societies. Something enters
the scene and changes the worldview w e previously held. That influence m a y be initiated in a
random way. It m a y begin in an unplanned way, or it m a y be the result of signal interference
to intended messages, or it m a y be the result of a sudden insight. A n y number of possibilities
exist. W h e n the chance input is embodied in new form, however, it ceases to be random and
becomes evolutionary. That is w h y chance is closely allied to experimentation in Fluxus. It is
related to the ways in which scientific knowledge grows, too.
Playfulness
Playfulness has been part of Fluxus since the beginning. Part of the concept of playfulness
has been represented by terms such as 'jokes', 'games', 'puzzles' and 'gags'. This role of gags
in Fluxus has sometimes been overemphasised. This is understandable. H u m a n beings tend
to perceive patterns by their gestalt, focusing on the most noticeable differences. W h e n
Fluxus emerged, art was under the influence of a series of attitudes in which art seemed to be
a liberal, secular substitute for religion. Art was so heavily influenced by rigidities of
conception, form and style that the irreverent Fluxus attitude stood out like a loud fart in a
small elevator. The most visible aspect of the irreverent style was the emphasis on the gag.
There is more to h u m o u r than gags and jokes, and there is more to playfulness than humour.
Play comprehends far more than humour. There is the play of ideas, the playfulness of free
experimentation, the playfulness of free association and the play of paradigm shifting that
are as c o m m o n to scientific experiment as to pranks.
Simplicity
Simplicity, sometimes called 'parsimony', refers to the relationship of truth and beauty.
Another term for this concept is 'elegance'. In mathematics or science, an elegant idea is that
idea which expresses the fullest possible series of meanings in the most concentrated possible
statement. That is the idea of Occam's Razor, a philosophical tool which states that a theory
that accounts for all aspects of a phenomenon with the fewest possible terms will be more
likely to be correct than a theory that accounts for the same phenomenon using more (or
more complex) terms. F r o m this perspective of philosophical modelling, Copernicus' model
of the solar system is better than Ptolemy's - must be better - because it accounts for a fuller
range of phenomena in fewer terms. Parsimony, the use of frugal, essential means, is related
to that concept.
This issue was presented in Higgins' original list as 'minimalism', but the minimalism has
come to have a precise meaning in the world of art. While some of the Fluxus artists like La
Monte Y o u n g can certainly be called minimalists, the intention and the meaning of their
minimalism is very different than the Minimalism associated with the N e w York art school of
that name. I prefer to think of La M o n t e as parsimonious. His work is a frugal concentration
250 KEN FRIEDMAN
of idea and meaning thatfitshis long spiritual pilgrimage, closer to Pandit Pran Nath than to
Richard Serra.
Simplicity of means, perfection of attention, are what distinguish this concept in the work
of the Fluxus artists.
Implicativeness
Implicativeness means that an ideal Fluxus work implies m a n y more works. This notion is
close to and grows out of the notion of elegance and parsimony. Here, too, you see the
relationship of Fluxus to experimentalism and to the scientific method.
Exemplativism
Exemplativism is the principle that Dick Higgins outlined in another essay, the 'Exemplativist
Manifesto'. Exemplativism is the quality of a work exemplifying the theory and meaning of
its construction. While not all Fluxus works are exemplative, there has always been a feeling
that those pieces which are exemplative are in some way closer to the ideal than those which
are not. Y o u could say, for example, that exemplativism is the distinction between George
Brecht's poetic proposals and Ray Johnson's - and probably shows w h y Brecht is in the
Fluxus circle while Johnson, as close to Fluxus as he is, has never really been a part of things.
Specificity
Specificity has to do with the tendency of a work to be specific, self-contained and to embody
all its o w n parts. Most art works rely on ambiguity, on the leaking away of meanings to
accumulate new meanings. W h e n a work has specificity, it loads meaning quite consciously.
In a sense, this m a y seem a contradiction in an art movement that has come to symbolise
philosophical ambiguity and radical transformation, but it is a key element in Fluxus.
Presence in Time
M a n y Fluxus works take place in time. This has sometimes been referred to by the term
'ephemeral', but the terms 'ephemerality' and 'duration' distinguish different qualities of time
in Fluxus. It is appropriate that an art movement whose very n a m e goes back to the Greek
philosophers of time and to the Buddhist analysis of time and existence in h u m a n experience
should place great emphasis on the element of time in art.
The ephemeral quality is obvious in the brief Fluxus performance works, where the term
ephemeral is appropriate, and in the production of ephemera, fleeting objects and
publications with which Fluxus has always marked itself. But Fluxus works often embody
a different sense of duration as in musical compositions lasting days or weeks, performances
that take place in segments over decades, even art works that grow and evolve over equally
long spans. Time - the great condition of h u m a n existence - is a central issue in Fluxus and in
the work that artists in the Fluxus circle create.
Musicality
Musicality refers to the fact that m a n y Fluxus works are designed as scores, as works which
can be realised by artists other than the creator. While this concept m a y have been born in
the fact that m a n y Fluxus artists were also composers, it signifies far more. The events, many
FLUXUS A N D COMPANY 251
object instructions, game and puzzle works - even some sculptures and paintings - work this
way. This means that you can o w n a George Brecht piece by carrying out one of Brecht's
scores. If that sounds odd, you might ask if you can experience Mozart simply by listening to
an orchestra play one of Mozart's scores. The answer is that you can. Perhaps another
orchestra or Mozart himself might have given a better rendition, but it is still Mozart's work.
This, too, is the case with a Brecht or a Knizak or a Higgins that is created to be realised from
a score.
The issue of musicality has fascinating implications. The mind and intention of the creator
are the key element in the work. The issue of the hand is only germane insofar as the skill of
rendition affects the work: in some conceptual works, even this is not an issue. Musicality is
linked to experimentalism and the scientific method. Experiments must operate in the same
manner. A n y scientist must be able to reproduce the work of any other scientist for an
experiment to remain valid. A s with other issues in Fluxus, this raises interesting problems.
Collectors want a work with hand characteristics, so some Fluxus works imply their o w n
invalidity for collectors.
Musicality suggests that the same work m a y be realised several times, and in each state it
may be the same work, even though it is a different realisation of the same work. This bothers
collectors w h o think of 'vintage' works as works located in a certain, distant era. The concept
of'vintage' is useful only when you think of it in the same way you think of wine: 1962 m a y
be a great vintage, 1966, too, but it m a y not be until 1979 or 1985 that another great vintage
occurs. If you think of the composers and conductors w h o have given us great interpretations
of past work, say a complete Beethoven cycle or a series of Brahms concertos, then, a decade
or two later, gave a dramatically different, yet equally rich interpretation of the same work,
you will see why the concept of vintage can only be appropriate for Fluxus when it is held to
mean what it means in wine. Y o u must measure the year by the flavour, not theflavourby
the year.
Musicality is a key concept in Fluxus. It has not been given adequate attention by scholars
or critics. Musicality means that anyone can play the music. If deep engagement with the
music, with the spirit of the music is the central focus of this criterion, then musicality m a y be
the key concept in Fluxus. It is central to Fluxus because it embraces so m a n y other issues
and concepts: the social radicalism of Maciunas in which the individual artist takes a
secondary role to the concept of artistic practice in society, the social activism of Beuys when
he declared that w e are all artists; the social creativity of Knizak in opening art into society;
the radical intellectualism of Higgins and the experimentalism of Flynt. All of these and more
appear in the full meaning of musicality.
He held a role that could be compared to the role of a chairperson. W h e n it became evident.
even to George himself, that others had key roles to play if Fluxus was to grow, he loosened
his notion of central control dramatically. It became far more important to him to spread
Fluxism as a social action than to dictate the artistic terms of every Fluxus artist. This is
evident if you see that Maciunas considered David Mayor a member of the Fluxcore, even
though Mayor was quite different to Maciunas in his artistic choices.
By the 1970s, George Maciunas was no longer as active in publishing and organising for
Fluxus as he had been a few years earlier. For example, while there were Fluxus evenings and
occasional Fluxus presentations, Maciunas organised no major festivals after David Mayor
finished the Fluxshoe.
In 1966 Maciunas had appointed several others as his co-directors. Fluxus South was
directed by Ben Vautier in Nice, Fluxus East by Milan Knizak and I directed Fluxus West.
Some have tried to make a point that 'Fluxus East wasn't Fluxus', as though only Maciunas
was Fluxus. That isn't the case: Maciunas authorised us to speak for Fluxus, to represent
Fluxus, to manage publications, to dispense copyright permission, and to act in every respect
on behalf of Fluxus.
While Maciunas did repudiate people in the early 1960s, even attempting to expel or purge
people from Fluxus, this was not how he behaved a few years later. It is a disservice to
George Maciunas to present him through the image of a petty (if lovable) tyrant, a cross
between an artistic Stalin and a laughable Breton. This notion belittles Maciunas' depth and
capacity as a human being, his ability to find more effective ways of working and to find
ways to grow.
George Maciunas was a fabulous organisational technologist and a great systematic
thinker, but he was not comfortable working with people in the million unsystematic ways
that people demand to work. This was why he changed his working method by the mid-1960s
and began to share the leadership role. That is h o w Fluxus took new forms and grew.
He became comfortable letting others develop Fluxus in other ways while giving advice
and criticism from time to time. That's how Fluxus found its feet in England in the 1970s.
That's how new Fluxus activists emerged in the States and in Europe and how they kept the
ideas and action alive. It is why Fluxus has been continuously active for nearly forty years.
ThefirstFluxus disappeared a long time ago. It replaced itself with the many forms of
Fluxus that came after. The many varieties of Fluxus activity took on their own life and had
a significant history of their own. It is unrealistic and historically inaccurate to imagine a
Fluxus controlled by one man. Fluxus was co-created by many people and it has undergone a
continuous process of co-creation and renewal for four decades.
Fluxus Today
Fluxus today is not the Fluxus that has sometimes been considered as an organised group
and sometimes referred to as a movement. Fluxus is a forum, a circle of friends, a living
community. Fluxism as a way of thinking and working is very much alive.
What was unique about Fluxus as a community was that we named ourselves. W e found
and kept our own name. Art critics named Abstract Expressionism, Pop Art, Minimalism
and Conceptualism. Fluxus named Fluxus. The German press took our name and fell in love
with it, but it was our name to begin with. What made it Fluxus was that it wasn't confined to
FLUXUS A N D COMPANY 253
art and it was perhaps this that saved us from being named by others. If it locked us out of
the art market on m a n y occasions, it m a d e it possible for us to m a k e interesting art on our
own terms.
In the last twenty years interest in Fluxus has gone through two, maybe three cycles of
growth and neglect. W e are still here, still doing what w e want to do, and still coming
together from time to time under the rubric of Fluxus. Since this is exactly what happened
during the 1960s and 1970s, it is clear that Fluxus did not die at some magical date in the
past. If you read your way d o w n the m a n y lists of Fluxus artists w h o were young and
revolutionary back in the 1960s, the 1990s have shown m a n y of them to be transformative
and evolutionary. They transformed the way that the world thinks about art, and they
transformed the relationship between art and the world around it.
The Fluxus dialogue has taken on a life of its own. A Fluxism vital enough to continue in
its own right was exactly what people intended at the beginning, though this has sometimes
had consequences that startled them as m u c h as anyone else. If it hasn't happened in exactly
the ways that they planned, this is because there are no boundaries between art and life. W h a t
counts is the fact that it happened.
NOTES
1 This essay was originally written for the exhibition Fluxus and Company at Emily
Harvey Gallery in 1989. It has been widely reprinted in revised versions and in various
translations since then.
2 Dick Higgins, 'Fluxus: Theory and Reception' (1982); included in this volume, p 217.
PART VI
DOCUMENTS OF FLUXUS
FLUXUS CHRONOLOGY: KEY MOMENTS AND
EVENTS
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INDEX
Page numbers in bold refer to a main reference to the subject.
Abstract Expressionism 117, 119, 121. 126, 'Chance-Imagery' (essay) 69-70, 92-3. Da Capo 48-57
128, 160,225-6,242 117, 118 Dada 3, 38, 54, 93, 95, 96, 97, 111, 155-64,
Aktual Group 53, 156, 158, 245 Deck 14, 16 168, 169, 174, 175-6, 177, 184, 195,
Aktual (magazine) 50 Delivery 72 218, 219, 220, 223, 226, 243, 248
Albrecht d 29 Dome 69 Davidovich, Jaime 194
Albrecht, Dieter 159 Drip Music 8, 47, 69 De Maria, Walter 106, 172, 185
Alocco, Marcel 24 Exercise 124 de Ridder, Willem 10, 29, 47, 49, 221, 244
Amsterdam 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 24 Piano Piece 102 De-coll/age (magazine) 15, 28, 32, 140
An Anthology 11, 12 -13, 24, 81, 86, 105, Saxophone Solo 120 Deleuze, Gilles 71, 73, 74, 83, 124, 125
106, 186, 187,243 Three Telephone Events 97 Dick, William Brisbane 226
Andersen, Eric 9, 10, 26. 43, 44, 46, 47, 49, Three Translocations of the Isle DiMaggio, Gino 38
94, 125, 137, 169, 221 of Wight 73 Dreyfus, Charles 24, 29
Opus 50 125 Time Table Event 69 Duchamp, Marcel 52, 54, 84, 85, 92-3, 95,
Random Audience 26 Time Table Music 69 96, 139, 144, 155, 157, 160, 161, 184,
Anderson, Laurie 234 Two Exercises 104 191, 196,221-2, 223, 242, 248
art-games 137 Universal Machine 144-5 Fountain 107-8
Artaud, Antonin 79 Water Yam ('Complete Works') 15, 16, portrait of 55
Artists' books 28, 236 189, 190, 224 Dupuy, Jean 167, 221, 235, 244
Aspen 138, 140 Wedding of Havana and Miami 73—4 Dusseldorf 3-5, 6, 7-8. 9
attention, act of 105-7 Word Event 4 -5,8, 32,71, 120
Ay-O 26-7, 52, 191, 204-5, 211, 224 Y a m Festival 17, 70-1 Ecart Performance Group 24
Black Hole 111 Breton, Andre 218-19, 220 Eco, Umberto 102
Romantic Piece for George Brisley, Stuart 27 Ehrenberg, Martha and Felipe 26, 30
Maciunas 204, 205 Brown, Paul 27 n.13
Buddha (Shakyamuni) 99, 112, 122 Ekstra Bladel 16
Baudrillard. Jean 172. 174, 175, 176-8Buddhism 93, 99, 104, 105, 109, 122, 128, ephemerality 43, 50, 51, 52. 64, 92, 99, 130,
Bauermeister, Mary 5. 13. 32-3 246, 250. and see Zen 225, 244, 250
beatniks 126. 127. 128. 248 Buddhism European Mail-Order Warehouse 10
Beau Geste Press 26, 28 Bunuel, Luis, Un chien andalou 111 event scores 99, 102-3, 104. 105, 110. 124,
Berger. Michael and Uta 23, 44. 46, 47, Bussotti, Sylvano 5, 7, 33 137, 145, 149
49 events (Events) 8, 12. 26-7, 28, 32, 68-71,
Berlin 9, 23. 25, 27, 48 Cage, John 5, 12, 49, 77, 78, 79, 82, 84, 72,
87,95-8,99, 141, 185,223, 227
Berner, Jeff II, 138 95-7, 107, 113. 123. 160, 161, 162, •Excellent "92"' 44-5, 46-7, 48
Beuys, Joseph 4, 5, 6, 9, 24. 55, 148-9, 172. 183^4, 185, 196,221. 222.223,242, exemplative work 102, 104, 119, 137, 244,
177, 244. 245. 247. 251 248 250
Block, Rene 9. 25, 48-9, 53, 237 classes given by 5, II. 32. 65, 75, 96-7, 186 exhibitions 22, 23, 25, 38, 40-3, 45-6, 47-8,
Bloodbath 159 in Cologne 32-3 158, 170, 233
boredom 63, 65-6, 67, 68, 69, 70, 74, 76, and immersion (resetting to zero) experimentalism II, 138, 139, 140, 141-4,
77-8, 82, 83, 86, 213, 233 63-5, 67, 70, 79 146-7, 219, 224. 244. 248, 250, 251
Brecht. George 5, 6, 9. II. 12, 13. 14, 15, objects and body 'residue' from 76
18, 19, 29. 30, 31, 33. 35,49, 86, 93. and repetiton 80, 83 'Festival or Misfits' 7, 101
94-5. 119, 122, 130, 170, 184, 185, 186, and sound 32, 68, 74-5, 96, 184, 191, 197 festivals 3-12, 32-3, 44-5, 48-9, 130, 175,
188-9, 195, 197, 220, 224, 243, 250 4 33" 96,98 187, 220, 233, 243
at Dusseldorf festival 3. 4 Theatre Piece 1 138 FILE (magazine) 145
in Cage's classes 5, 11, 97, 222 chance (systems) 6, 25, 54, 67, 68, 69-70, Filliou, Marianne 10
and cartography 72, 73-4 92-3, 117, 118, 222, 244, 248-9 Filliou, Robert 10, 19, 20, 24, 31, 32, 49,
and re I' TRE 17, 147 Chiari, Giuseppe 12, 24. 28, 244 225, 244, 245
and crystals 73 Chiesi, Rosanna 37, 38, 39 Permanent Creation (Instead of
and events 32, 67, 68-71, 72, 97-8 Christiansen, Henning 24, 49, 244 Art) 147
in France 10, 20 Cologne 5, 32-3, 57 Research at the Stedelijk 27
lights on and off 191, 192, 197 'Fluxus Virus" 44, 45-6 Territory 2 of the General
puzzles by 189, 190 Concept Art 86-8, 184 Republic 147
and scale 71-4, 78 Conz, Francesco (Conz Editions) 38, 39 Yes - an action poem 108-9
scores by 69, 104. 105, 257 Copenhagen 5, 6, 7, 8, 26, 44, 46, 47 Film-Maker's Cinematheque 146
and space 68-7] Cornell. Joseph 1X4. 189 films 15, 18, 83. 143 4, 188
'Towards Events' exhibition 68 Corner, Philip 9, 15, 19, 36.43,47, 49. 213, Flash Art 27, 29, 145
Book of the Tumbler on Fire 38, 74 224. 244 Flux-, explanation of 223
"Page 52' 72-3 Correspondence Art 22, 24. 25, 28, 29, 145, Fluxamusements 144, 147
Burette Music 69 146 Ftuxartisls 223, 225
Cabinet 69 Cranbrook Academy of Art Museum, Fluxattitudes' 44, 45, 48, 162, 163, 174,
Case 68-9 Michigan 23, 39. 40 221
INDEX 307
Fluxboxes (boxes) 12, 13-14, 18, 26, 92, Groh, Klaus 29 Janco, Marcel 175
143, 146, 149, 189-90, and see Group Ongaku 26, 110 Japan 9, 26, 43, 111, 112, 127, 184, 224,
Yearboxes Guerilla Art Action Group 159, 163 240-1, 243
Fluxclinics 56-7 Johns, Jasper 55, 76, 159, 160, 162, 218
Fluxfeasts (food) 20, 221, 227-8, 233 Hague, The, festivals 5, 6, 9, 10 Johnson, Ray 146, 250
Fluxfests 146, 223 Hansen, Al 5, 11, 32, 97, 138, 140, 222, Jones, Donna Jo 10
Fluxfilms, see films 227 Jones, Joe 12, 33, 39, 46, 47, 49, 50, 51
Fluxfriends 20, 223 Happening & Fluxus' 22, 24, 27 Jones, Spike 95, 139, 192
Fluxhouse Cooperatives 146 Happenings 7, 19, 22, 91, 97, 138, 140, 141,
Fluxhouses 20, 200 162, 184, 196, 218, 221, 222-3, 224, Kaprow, Allan 5, 15, 33, 55, 97, 138, 140,
Fluxkit 18 234, 247 156, 185, 221, 222, 226
Fluxkits (kits) 57, 142, 143, 146, 149 Hendricks, Geoffrey 20, 24, 45, 46, 49, 50, Kassel 23, 48, 172
Fluxlabyrinth 23, 24 52, 2Q5, 221, 235, 244 Kirkeby, Per 11,26
Fluxmobile 11 Body/Hair. May 15, 1971 51 Klein, Yves 79, 84, 85, 184, 185, 196
Fluxmoon 94 For Wiesbaden Fluxus, 1992 51 Kline, Franz 121, 127
fluxping-pong 24 Hendricks, Jon 39, 40, 41, 42, 163, 166 Klintberg, Bengt af 4, 8, 49, 104, 137, 244
Fluxshoe 20, 25-8, 45, 52 hermeneutics 229-30, 231, 236 Knizak, Milan 11, 46, 49-50, 52-4, 56-7,
Fluxshops 18, 190 Higgins, Dick 3, 7, 9, 10, 12, 29, 33, 35, 46, 137, 141, 156, 244, 245,251,252
Fluxstory 228 75, 77, 78, 94, 101, 105, 106, 123, 125,Knowles, Alison 3,9, 10,11, 12, 13, 14, 17,
'Fluxus: A Conceptual Country' 126, 160, 162, 167, 174, 175-6, 178, 19, 29, 126, 137, 138, 156, 163,205,
(exhibition) 158, 162 185, 186, 190 220,224,225,231,235
'Fluxus: A Long Story with Many Knots. a la carte performance 47 a la carte performance 47
Fluxus in Germany, 1962-1994' 48 at Cal Arts 138 at Wiesbaden 8, 49, 51, 219, 243
Fluxus Cabaret 205 at Wiesbaden 8, 49, 50-1, 243 excluded from Fluxus 36
Fluxus Codex 41, 42, 163 in Cage's classes 5, 11, 32, 96 in Filliou's Yes... 108-9
Fluxus East 11, 252 excluded 36, 43 Bean Rolls 45, 56
Fluxus 7(1964) 12, 14, 16, 33, 187-8, 243 film 83, 144 'Bread and Water, 1992' 55, 56
Fluxus International & Cie 24 N Y Audio-Visual Group organised Indian Moon 55-6
Fluxus Mailorder Warehouses 17, 18 by 32, 138 installation for 'In the Spirit
Fluxus North 11 on post-cognitive work 128-9, 148 of Fluxus' 43
Fluxus Preview Review 16 Something Else Press founded by Nivea Cream Piece 8
Fluxus South 11, 252 19,20 Pocket Warmer 45
Fluxus Symposium, A A Center 43, 162 'A Child's History of Fluxus' 6, 155, Proposition (making a salad) 107-8
'Fluxus Virus' (exhibition) 44, 45-6 157-8, 161 koans 94, 98, 100-1, 108, 115, 121, 124,148
Fluxus West 11, 39,252 'Boredom and Danger' (essay) 63, 64-6, Kopcke, Arthur 4, 8, 9, 10, 15, 49,
Fluxus Yearbooks 13, 14-15, 188 67,80 243
Fluxus Year Box 2 15, 18, 188, 189; see also Constellation No 2 8 Kosugi, Takehisa 12. 26. 36, 105, 109, 110-
Yearboxes Constellation No 4 4, 8 11, 224
Fluxwedding 205, 231-2 Constellation No 7 A Chironomy 1 103^4
Flynt, Henry 10, 13, 15, 24, 29, 33, 34, 35, 'Contributions' 66 Manodharma With Mr. Y66 110
39, 148, 185, 186, 251 'Danger Music' 51, 64 Music for a Revolution 110-13
Concept Art essay 86-8 Danger Music #2 51 Organic Music 110
Implications - Concept Art Danger Music Number Fifteen (For Theatre Music 14, 110
Version of Coloured Sheet the Dance) 100 Kubota, Shigeko 12, 105, 209
Music No.l 87, 88 'Exemplativist Manifesto' 102, 104, 137,
France 9, 10, 18, 158, 185 250 Landow, George 24
Friedman, Ken II, 18, 20, 29, 118, 121, 'Fluxus Theory and Reception' language and words 99-101
136, 138, 145, 146, 149, 166, 167, 169, (essay) 159,217-36 Lauffer, Dan 24
172, 174, 175, 177, 221 His Gateway (for Pierre Mercure), Lennon, John 144. 148, 203
address list 29, 145 1992 50-1 Lens, Bob 24
and Fluxshoe 25, 26, 27 'Intermedia' (essay) 65, 91, 140, 148, Lewis, Glen 146
on Fluxus and company 237-53 247 London 7, 107, 140
and Fluxus West II, 39 Postface / Jefferson's Birthday Lyotard, Jean-Francois 129, 177
passport to Flux 146 (book) 8
Twelve Fluxus ideas 244-51 St Joan of Beaurevoir (play) 66 Mac Low, Jackson 10, 11, 12, 14, 15, 24,
'Thousand Symphonies' 51 33,43,67-8, 105, 107, 128, 186, 187,
'Getting into Events' (essay) 137
Omaha Flow Systems 27 Hompson, Davi Det 27 220, 222, 234, 243
Houedard, D o m Sylvester 140, 141 and An Anthology 12, 24
Personal Space 173
humour (jokes, gags, spirit of play) in Cage's classes 5, 97
Scrub Piece 106
6, 25, 29, 36, 119-21, 145, 146, 147-8, 149. "Five Biblical Poems' 67
Zen Is When 9'1
172, 173. 191, 192, 195, 196, 197,224, Thanks 67
Zen Vaudeville 120, 149
225, 231, 232, 249 Thanks II 8
Fuller, Buckminster 96, 138, 238, 247
Hutchins, Alice 27-8 Tree Movie 83
Futurism 38, 95, 163, 184, 192, 217-18,
Maciunas, Billie 199-211,231
219, 220, 223, 226
Ichiyanagi, Toshi 7, 33, 97 Maciunas, George 7, 8, 9, 10-11, 27,29, 53,
Image Bank 38, 145 105, 106-7, 146, 156, 167, 168, 177,
Gaglioni, Bill 39
199-211,225,226,235,243,245,
games and puzzles 26, 27, 31, 38, 139, 189, implicativeness 224, 225, 244, 250
Implosions 20 251-2
190, 226, 251
'In the Spirit of Fluxus' 43, 44, 163 An Anthology designed by 12-13, 186-7
Germany 9, 36, 48-9, 140, 244
intermedia 38, 65, 91, 94, 95, 105, 117, 222, in Aspen 140
Getty Centre and Archive 42
224, 226, 237, 247-8 at Dusseldorf festival 3, 4, 5, 6
globalism (internationalism) 224, 244-7
'International Cyclopedia of Plans cans of food 57
Goffman, Erving 141
and Occurrences' 27 Fluxboxes for Fluxshoe 26
Good Buy Supermarket 44-5, 47, 48
Italy 37-9 and Fluxus 1 12, 14, 15,32, 187-8
Gosewitz, Ludwig 24
Ives, Charles 64 and Fluxus (leadership, interpretation of
Grimes, Bob 24
308 INDEX
and vision) 7, 18. 27, 33-7, 39, 40-3, Museum of Modern Art 41, 159, 161 Petasz, Pawel 29
45, 54. 91, 95, 136, 139, 147. 149, 177, Neuberger Museum 40-1 Phillpot, Clive 41, 166
219, 220.223, 224. 243. 251-2 'Perpetual Fluxus Festival' photography 16, 17, 46, 87-8, 117
interview with Miller 147, 183-98 (Washington Square Gallery) 10 Politi. Giancarlo 27, 29
mobile clinic set up by 56 SoHo 32, 146. 200 Pollock, Jackson 68, 117, 184
'Neo-Haiku' 28, 120 Y A M Festival' 7 post music 76-7
and newsletter No. 6 controversy 34-5 New York Audio-Visual Group 11, 32. 75, postal systems 28, 29, 34, 76-7, and
on Zen 127-8 138, 244 see mail-an
portrait of, by Williams 54, 55 New York Correspondence School publications 7, 12 20, 28-9, 37-8, 39^40,
publications, essays and charts Weekly Breeder 145, 146 52. 145. 186-7. 220. 227
by 13-19, 29, 39, 95, 183-5, 188, 189, 190, News-Policy-Letter No. 1 13, 15 Purge Manifesto 3 4, 6. 40. 45
227 News-Policy-Letter No. 4 15
school prospectus by 138-9 News-Policy-Letter No. 5 16 Rauschenberg, Robert 55, 159, 160. 162.
and Stockhausen 33-4, 36 News-Policy-Letter No. 6 10, 34-5, 36 218, 222
and V TRE 147 Nishitani, Keiji 122 Reilly, Terry 3
on Zen 127-8 Reinhardt, Ad 141
12 Big Names 55 oblivion 63, 66, 67, 68, 77, 83, 87-8 repetition 80-3, 85, 86. 148
'Fluxus...' 36 Oliva, Achille Bonito 38, 39, 170 Rinzai Zen 100, 122. 124
'Fluxus Art-Amusement' 119 Ono, Yoko 32. 49, 113-16, 141. 144, 148. Robertson. Clive 27
In Memorium to Adriano Olivetti 4, 8 149, 185. 186, 244 Rot, Diter 140, 187, 227
Learning Machine 142. 143 Chewing Gum Machine Piece 144 Ruhe, Harry, Fluxus: The Most
manifesto by ('Purge Manifesto') 'Dispensing Machines" 144 Radical and Experimental Art
6,40,41,219 Lighting Piece 114 Movement of the Sixties 24
'Neo-Dada in Music, Theatre. Poetry, Sun Piece 113 Ruscha, Edward, Parking Lot 140
An" (manifesto) 160 To the Wesleyan People' 113-14, 115 Russolo. Luigi 50, 184, 217
Smile Box 141 Wall Piece for Orchestra 120
Twelve Big Names 23 Wind Piece 115-16 Saito. Takako 26. 29. 33, 46, 49, 244
mail order, see Fluxus Mailorder Satie, Eric, 241; Vexations 65, 80
Warehouses Paik, Nam June 4, 7, 9, 10, 12, 15, IX, 29,
scale 71 -4
mail-art, 29. 145-6, 147. and see 35, 80, 144, 173, 174-5, 176, 177, 185, Schippers, W i m 10
postal systems 220, 224. 245 Schmit, Tomas 4, 9, 10, 12, 19, 23, 35. 36.
Marinetti, Filippo Tommaso 217 at Cal Arts 138 97, 221, 244
Martin, Henry 38 on boredom 77-8 Schneemann, Carolee 27, 209
Mathieu, Georges 184 in Cologne 5. 31, 32 schools and colleges 138-9
Maxfield, Richard 186,222 excluded 36 'Scissors Brothers Warehouse' 11
Mayor, David 25, 26. 28, 29, 252 music and post music 75-7 scores 14, 16, 17, 18, 103, 250-1
meaningless work 106 portrait of 55 Serra, Richard, Lead Shot Runs 140
Mekas, Jonas 146 and Stockhausen 32, 33 Shiomi, Mieko 12, 26, 30, 49, 105, 109, 110,
Metzger, Gustav 140 and TV, electronics and media 46, 76, 224, 230
Miller, Larry 20, 40, 57, 137, 208, 212-13, 77-8, 245, 247 Disappearing Event 221
221, 244 in V TRE 17, 147 Event for the Late Afternoon 120
interview with Maciunas 147, 183-98 in Wiesbaden 8. 49, 243 Shadow Piece II 124-5
minimalism (simplicity) 148-9, 172-3, 222. and voice 78, 79-80 Water Music 19
223, 224-5, 229. 230, 233. 234. 239, on Zen 126-7 signatures 83 6
240, 249-50 Exposition of Experimental Silverman Collection 23, 39 40, 42, 43. 204
modernism 166-71 Television 79 Silverman, Gilbert and Lila 23, 39
Moorman, Charlotte 23, 33. 140 Exposition of Music - Electronic simplicity, see minimalism
Morris. Robert 140. 185, 186, 194-5 Television 77 Smithson, Robert 140
Motherwell, Robert 157, 161. 162 Monthly Review of the University Sohm, Dr Hans (Archiv Sohm) 16. 22, 26,
M u D i M a Museum. Milan 38 of A vant-garde Hinduism (music 40
Musgrave, Victor 101 periodical) 16, 76 Something Else Press 19, 20, 28, 32, 190,
musicality 244. 250-1 Robot Opera 9 218, 226, 245
Symphony for 20 Rooms 78, 82-3 sound 74-80
'neo-haiku events' (theatre) 28, 120, 129. Utopian Laser Television space 68-71
149 (manifesto) 247 specificity 224, 225, 250
Netherlands 9-10, 18, 158 Zen for Film 83 Spoerri, Daniel 4, 5, 19, 55, 140, 244
New Music 8 Zen for Head 24, 121 Homage a I'Allemagne 4
New Music Workshop 11 Pari & Dispari 37-8 L'OPTIQUE MODERN 16
New School of Social Research 5, 11, 32, Patterson, Ben 5, 10, 12, 14, 15, 19, 32, 43, Lunettes noires, or Fakir's
75,96-7, 138, 186 114,220,224,234 Spectacles 111
New Year reunions 23 a la carle performance 46-7 Stockhausen, Karl Heinz 7, 32, 33, 83. 87
New York 7, 10, 11, 12, 14, 25, 158, 233, at Wiesbaden 8, 49 Originale controversy 19, 33-4, 36
234. 242 in Cologne 5, 33 Surrealism 92, 95, 111, 184, 218-19, 220,
'12 Fluxus Concerts' (Fluxhall) 10 poster for Da Capo 49, 56 223, 226, 242
Bread &' 11 'The Clinic of Dr. Ben (BM. MS)' 57 Suzuki, Daisetz Tcitaro 93, 96, 97, 99, 123,
Cafe au G o G o 7, 108 duck car 46 126
'Chambers Street' series 7, 11. 185 Instruction No. 2 19 Szeemann, Harald 22
Emily Harvey Gallery 111 Lick 24 Szentjoby, Tamas 24
'Excellent "92"' 46 Paper Piece 3-4, 8, 9
Festivals of the Avant-Garde 23. 33 Tour 111 Taj Mahal Travellers 26, 28
Fluxattitudes' 44, 45, 48 Pedersen, Knud 26, 44 Theatre Total performance group 10
'Fluxorchestra Concerts' performances 3-11. 19, 22, 31-2, 52, 69, 92, Tinguely, Jean 17, 55, 141
(Carnegie) 10 119-21, 129. 137, 141, 175, 194, 221, Tokyo 109-10
Hi Red Centre at Waldorf Astoria 56 226, 227, 229-30, 231, 232, 233-5 Tone, Yasunao 109
Monday Night Letter' series 7 a la carte format 46-7 Tot, Endre 27
INDEX 309
Total Art 10, 20 Vostell, Wolf 4, 5, 7, 9, 12,16, 29,141, 155-Williams, Emmett 3, 4, 7, 12, 13,14, 20, 24,
Tudor, David 33, 96 6, 185, 220, 224, 235 36, 95-6, 99, 138, 174, 175, 220, 224
Tzara, Tristan 54, 93, 155, 157, 162, 174 at Wiesbaden 8, 24, 243 at Wiesbaden 8, 49, 243
excluded 43, 46 Alphabet Symphony 4, 55
'Ubi Fluxus, ibi Motus' (exhibition) 38,De-coll/age (magazine) 15, 28, 32, 140 Counting Song 4, 8, 9
39 Decollage Kleenex 4 Four Directional Song of Doubt 8, 54
United States 7, 18, 36, 39^13, 45, 48, 126, Kleenex 226 His Twelve Portraits 54
127, 219, 244, 233, 242, 243, 248 Phanomene 9 Yes It Was Still There. An Opera 80-1
Wolff, Christian 7, 33
V TRE 17, 147, 190 Wada, Yoshimasa 24, 43, 221, 244 Woodrow, Paul 27
aV TRE 147 Walker Art Centre, Minneapolis 43, 44, Wuppertal 9, 227
ecfiVe ThReE 126-7 158, 163
ccV TRE 17, 147, 227 Warhol. Andy 159-60, 197 Yam Festival 7, 17
Van der Marck, Jan 25 Watts, Alan 116-18 Yearboxes 13, 15, 16, 17, 26, 188, 189, 190,
Vautier, Ben 10, 12, 29, 33, 140, 174, 185, f/h Trace 119-20 197
189, 191, 192, 196, 197, 221,243 Watts, Robert 4, 11, 12, 17, 29, 49, 156, Young, La Monte 3, 5, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15,
Fluxus South directed by 11, 252 163, 184, 185, 186, 188, 189, 190, 192, 32, 33, 81-2, 96, 185, 186, 187, 224,
signature 84-6, 192 197-8, 202, 213, 220, 224, 244 243, 244, 249-50
Total Art projects 20, 118 Implosions 20 556 for Henry Flynt 8
'Flux Mystery Food' 57 'Dollar Bill' 16 Composition #3 1960 98, 186
ffeis 47 Rocks Marked by Weight 19 Composition #7 I960 81, 186
Mol, Ben,je signe (1, Ben, sign) 84 Two Inches 4, 8 Composition #10 1960 81, 121
'Postman's Choice' 198 Winter Event 102, 103 Compositions 1961 16
Tango 120 Welin, Karl Eric 8, 243 Draw a straight line... 82, 186
Visa TouRiste (Passport to the State Wiesbaden 5, 6, 7, 23-4, 44, 46-7, 48-51,
of Flux) 146-7 54, 55, 158, 175, 187, 219, 220, 233-4, Zen Buddhism 79, 93-135, 160, 173, 195,
von Biel, Michael 8 243, 244 237
Fluxus began in the 1950s as a loose, international community of artists,
architects, composers and designers. By the 1960s, Fluxus had become a
laboratory of ideas and an arena for artistic experimentation in Europe, Asia
and the United States. Described as 'the most radical and experimental art
movement of the 1960s', Fluxus challenged conventional thinking on art
and culture for over four decades. It had a central role in the birth of such
key contemporary art forms as concept art, installation, performance art,
intermedia and video. Despite this influence, the scope and scale of this
unique phenomenon have m a d e it difficult to explain Fluxus in normative
historical and critical terms. The Fluxus Reader oilers the first
comprehensive overview on this challenging and controversial group.
The Fluxus Reader is written by leading scholars and experts from Europe
and the United States. It is edited by Ken Friedman, a Fluxus artist as a
sixteen-year-old university student in 1966 and n o w Associate Professor of
Leadership and strategic design at the Norwegian School of Management,
Oslo, where he also directs the Nordic Center for Innovation.
ISBN 0-471-97858-2